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Why we’re suing the state of Minnesota over the Environmental Trust Fund

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Whitney Clark
In the final hours of the 2018 legislative session, lawmakers raided an estimated $164 million from the state’s voter-approved Environment & Natural Resources Trust Fund (ENRTF) to pay principal and interest on state bonding projects. In its 30-year existence, the Environmental Trust Fund has never before been used to pay off state bonds.

This raid is unconstitutional and violates the will of the voters. Legal intervention is not something we take lightly, but exceptional times call for exceptional measures.

These legislative actions leave us no choice but to sue Minnesota Management and Budget, the state agency charged with selling these bonds. Minnesota’s next governor and Legislature deserve a chance to correct this mistake and fund the proposed projects at a much-reduced cost through traditional sources of funding.

Raiding our Trust Fund: the wrong approach

In 1988 (and twice since then), Minnesota voters approved a constitutional amendment to dedicate a portion of Minnesota’s lottery proceeds to projects that support clean air, clean water and wildlife.

[cms_ad:x100]Raiding any voter-backed trust fund to pay interest on state bonds is irresponsible, but this bill is in exceptionally shortsighted and violates state law and the Minnesota Constitution several times over.

  • Illegal substitution: the enabling legislation for the trust fund is clear: “… the trust fund may not be used as a substitute for traditional sources of funding environmental and natural resources activities.” The state’s general fund has always paid for debt service on bonding projects, making this a clear case of illegal substitution.
  • Forbidden use of funds (1): The enabling legislation forbids ENRTF money from being used for hazardous and solid waste disposal facilities. The raid claims $6 million plus interest from the trust fund for just such a facility: the Anoka landfill.
  • Forbidden use of funds (2): The enabling legislation prohibits the ENRTF from being used for municipal wastewater treatment, yet this raid claims millions in ENRTF funds for just that purpose.
  • A massive fiscal blunder. The raid wastes an extra $35 million. Why? Paying off debt from the Trust Fund comes at a higher interest rate, meaning it will cost taxpayers at least $35 million more than if the state used regular bonds, and $66 million more than using cash from our state’s current budget surplus. We can certainly think of better ways to use $35 million dollars in voter-approved funds.

Michael Noble
Legal intervention is not something we take lightly. However, these legislative actions require the conservation community to take this unprecedented step.

Voters approved this trust fund because they wanted to protect our land, air and water. Instead, legislators approved this eleventh-hour proposal without public testimony.

At risk: every constitutionally dedicated fund

If the state of Minnesota allows this practice, there may be no end to it. Every constitutionally dedicated fund is at risk. When voters approved the Minnesota Lottery through a constitutional amendment, they understood the proceeds would fund new projects to protect Minnesota’s environment, and not be siphoned off to pay for basic government services that already had a source of funding. Two decades later, when voters approved the Legacy Amendment, they understood that they were dedicating new funds to clean water, arts, parks, trails, and our outdoor heritage.

[cms_ad:x101]While the specific wording of each amendment is different, the principle underlying both is the same: Voters chose to dedicate new funds for these priorities. The Environmental Trust Fund raid undermines that dedication, and tests this constitutional principle. That is why we are compelled to challenge it.

The projects proposed to receive this funding are much needed, and should be funded through proper means. Our hope is that through legal intervention, we can work with legislators and Minnesota’s next governor to fund these projects through traditional sources during the next session.

Whitney Clark is the executive director of Friends of the Mississippi River, a nonprofit that engages people to protect, restore and enhance the Mississippi River and its watershed in the Twin Cities region. Michael Noble is the executive director of Fresh Energy, a nonprofit speeding Minnesota’s transition to a clean energy economy.

The organizations participating in the lawsuit include Clean Water Action, Fresh Energy, Friends of Minnesota Scientific and Natural Areas, Friends of the Mississippi River, Minnesota Environmental Partnership, Minnesota Outdoor Heritage Alliance, The Izaak Walton League of Minnesota, and the Minnesota Native Plant Society, Inc.


MinnPost partners with CityLab to co-host data-focused midterm happy hour on Oct. 30

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MinnPost is excited to partner with CityLab to co-host Brews, Data, and the Suburbs: CityLab + MinnPost’s 2018 Midterm Happy Hour on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 6 p.m. at Sisyphus Brewing (712 Ontario Ave W in Minneapolis).

MinnPost data reporter Greta Kaul and CityLab data journalist David Montgomery will talk about why the suburbs matter so much in Congress this year, and which local and state elections you should be watching.

Register for this free event through Eventbrite.

You may have heard that suburban votes will be particularly significant in the 2018 midterms. David Montgomery’s recent story for CityLab, written in collaboration with Richard Florida, explains why districts like Minnesota’s 3rd could have such an outsized impact.

With so many competitive races in Minnesota, MinnPost’s Greta Kaul’s reporting explains which ones in particular are most likely to tip the balance of power in Congress and the state House. She also wrote (and illustrated!) a guide to reading polls the smart way.

[cms_ad:x100] Tickets to the #HappyHourLab are free, but advance registration is required as space is limited. As we count down to the election, come drink and talk local elections with two of the region’s preeminent data journalists. Light snacks will be provided.

Not able to join us? You can get stories sent to your inbox and be the first to know about upcoming events by signing up for MinnPost and CityLab newsletters.

Northern Spark 2019 theme is ‘We Are Here’; Nirmala Rajasekar album release at the Cedar

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One way to understand where Northern Spark is heading is by looking back at where it’s been. Year to year, the only sure thing is it will change, sometimes profoundly.

For the first seven years, inspired by Europe’s “Nuit Blanche” nighttime arts festivals, Northern Spark was one night, all night, dusk to dawn. In 2018, it switched to two nights, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. That’s where it will stay for 2019.

Over the years, Northern Spark has taken place in both Minneapolis and St. Paul, just Minneapolis, just St. Paul, along the Minneapolis riverfront, in the Minneapolis metro – and in 2017, in seven neighborhoods along the Green Line, from the Commons to Lowertown. In 2018, it was back in downtown Minneapolis on the Commons, in the Minneapolis Central Library and along Nicollet Mall. The theme that year was “Commonality.”

Announced late last week, the theme for 2019 is “We Are Here.” On June 14 and 15, the festival will move into places where those words have special, hard-fought meaning: St. Paul’s Rondo neighborhood and the American Indian Cultural Corridor in Minneapolis. It’s also back on the Commons, which will be, for the second year, the site of the latest Creative City Challenge winner. (See below for more about that.)

[cms_ad:x100]The subthemes for “We Are Here” are Resilience, Renewal and Regeneration. The theme and subthemes are meant to push artists’ creativity around cultural and societal issues.

The Open Call for artist projects starts soon, with opportunities for participatory installations, staged performances and screenings. This year, Northern Spark will offer a new series of three free workshops to help artists figure out how to fit their work into the festival’s context. The workshops are “Brainstorming and Vision” (Nov. 1), “Crafting a Pitch” (Dec. 1), and “Project Realization” (Dec. 11). Go here to learn more and register.

Photo by Christopher Stiche
“Carry On Homes,” the 2018 Creative City Challenge winner
The really big Northern Spark-related project, to be unveiled and featured at the opening of the festival, is the Creative City Challenge, a temporary, destination artwork on the Commons that acts as a sociable, participatory platform for four months. It’s a major installation. Three finalists will each receive $2,500 to create full proposals. The winning proposal will receive a $50,000 commission to execute the project. The Creative City Challenge 2019 must also relate to the “We Are Here” theme and subthemes. View the full Open Call here.

The picks

Tonight (Wednesday, Oct. 24) at the Showplace Icon: “Who Will Write Our History?” The Twin Cities Jewish Film Festival has partnered with the Twin Cities Film Fest. Among the films to be shown this year is Robert Grossman’s feature documentary about Jewish journalists, scholars and community leaders in the Warsaw Ghetto who created the Oyneg Shabes-Ringelblum Archive, which has been called “perhaps the most important collection of original material compiled by Jews during the Holocaust.” The film features the voices of Joan Allen and Adrian Brody. 8 p.m. FMI and tickets ($12).

Thursday at Jazz Central Studios: Ben Rosenblum. If you’re a fan of classic jazz piano – melodic, emotional, technically masterful and swinging – catch New York-based Rosenblum while he’s in town. Just 24, he started winning awards in 2010, graduated from Columbia-Juilliard in 2016 and released his debut album, “Instead,” in 2017. His second, “River City,” came out in 2018. He’s not wasting any time. Rosenblum will be at Jazz Central with bassist Jeremy Boettcher and drummer Peter Johnson. FMI. 8 p.m., $10 at the door. On Sunday, you can find him at the Ted Mann in “The Call,” a free concert with U of M singers, countertenor Ryland Angel (with whom he has worked on several projects) and Wilco guitarist Nels Cline. 4 p.m. FMI.

Friday at the Cedar: Hailu Mergia. In March of this year, the Guardian published an interview with “the Ethiopian jazz legend who jams in his taxi.” Keyboardist Mergia and his band ruled Ethiopia’s nightclub scene in the 1970s. In 1981, they came to the U.S. for a tour that proved disappointing. Some band members went home; others stayed. Living and driving taxi in Washington, D.C., Mergia faded into obscurity. The 2013 reissue of a 1985 album led to tours of the U.S. and Europe. In early 2018, Mergia released “Lala Belu,” his first new full-length album in two decades. Now 71, he’s enjoying a career resurgence that will include this appearance at the Cedar, co-presented by the Walker’s Performing Arts Series, a badge of coolness and contemporary relevance. Minnesota’s own Yonathan’s Cultural Show will open. Doors at 7 p.m., music at 8. FMI and tickets ($25/20).

Saturday at the Ordway: TU Dance 15th Anniversary Fall Concert. The St. Paul dance company founded by former Alvin Ailey dancers Toni Pierce-Sands and Uri Sands is having a very good year: four sold-out shows with Bon Iver at the Palace, then another at the Hollywood Bowl. Their fall concert will include a new retrospective work that reflects on the company’s repertoire; “Salve” (2017), about human connections and healing; and “With Love” (2011), inspired by the paintings of African American artist Ernie Barnes and set to the music of Donny Hathaway. 7:30 p.m. FMI and tickets ($42-22).

Nirmala Rajasekar
Courtesy of the artist
A master of Carnatic music and a virtuoso on the veena, performer Nirmala Rajasekar has lived in Minnesota for more than 20 years.
Sunday at the Cedar: Nirmala Rajasekar: “Maithree: The Music of Friendship” album release. A master of Carnatic music and a virtuoso on the veena (a plucked string instrument), composer, performer and educator Rajasekar has lived in Minnesota for more than 20 years. As the title of her new album suggests, this is music played among friends. Featuring South Indian drum guru Boopathi, cellist Michelle Kinney, brothers Pat (clarinet) and Tim O’Keefe (world percussion), it’s warm, joyous and upbeat. The songs include originals and new arrangements of Indian, Irish and Turkish tunes. The title track dates from a 1966 concert at the United Nations, its message one of world peace and friendship across borders. All ages. Doors at 2 p.m., show at 3. FMI and tickets ($12 advance, $15 day of show).

On Trump, falsehoods, and the media’s approach to them

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I’ve been scribbling for a living since 1973, and was raised and trained in the old-school model of journalism that we called “objectivity.”

The term was borrowed from science, but journalism was never science. Journo-objectivity was never perfect, but it sorta worked. Now it doesn’t. Now it’s pretty much dead, at least in coverage of national political and governmental news. To a significant degree, the candidacy and the now presidency of Donald Trump may have finished it off.

The latest nail in the coffin of the objectivity model of journalism is a headline from yesterday’s Washington Post, which read:

“Trump and Republicans settle on fear — and falsehoods — as a midterm strategy.”

[cms_ad:x100]The story itself is filled with Trumpian falsehoods — or, at best, claims that can’t be proven. The old journalistic system is breaking down somewhat under the stress of this much mendacity by the actual president of the United States.

The objectivity rule

The old objectivity model was rooted in the rule that reporters report facts and don’t allow their personal politics to interfere. It was always a bit shaky.

A factual story could be biased without including any falsehoods, if the person reporting the facts was biased and allowed their power to choose which facts to report, and which to leave out, to be influenced by their bias. And most reporters were liberals, so that issue was a real and serious problem with the objectivity model, as smart conservatives sometimes pointed out.

But the model also required journalists, in addition to being factual, to be “balanced,” which referred to the practice of respectfully quoting people with differing politics and allowing liberals and conservatives to express themselves, and let readers decide for themselves what to believe.

That old job description included me, back when I was an old-school “objective” reporter. (MinnPost now considers me a columnist, who is allowed to analyze the news and express his views, as I am doing here.)

The old model did allow an “objective” reporter, if a politician, for example, said something false, to seek documentary evidence, or interview experts who could offer a true (or truer) version of the matter in question.

That model was far from perfect. Conservative critics said the fact that most journalists were liberals was a deep flaw. I had some sympathy for that view. (Newspapers and other media outlets did not set out to hire liberals. But, for reasons I’ve never fully understood, something about the job seemed to attract mostly liberals.)

But the main goal was to force-feed the news pages (and TV broadcasts) with facts, facts, accurate facts, and leave the opinionizing to the columnists and editorial writers. And the system more or less worked.

Then came Trump

Then came Trump, the biggest liar in our political history. Trump lies all the time. When asked to back up one of his lies with facts, he either repeats the same lie more loudly, changes the subject, issues a factless dismissal of the question, or denounces the (according to him) lying media for its audacity in pressing him to be more accurate.

I’m not the world’s biggest expert on all this. But, to keep writing as if I were, I’d say that the old model relied on the belief that if a public figure told enough lies, and journalism stuck to the facts, the liar’s credibility would decline and he would be forced to lie less often or be driven from the public stage.

[cms_ad:x101]Trump has demonstrated the failure of that belief. He shows no more sign of caring about factual accuracy than he ever did. (The story with the headline above, which set off this whole rant of mine, is filled with Trumpian half-truths and quarter-truths and flat-out lies. I’ll list a few at the bottom.

I’m so addicted to the idea of factual accuracy that I can’t pretend to fully comprehend the allure of a politician who lies constantly. I tell myself, knowing I don’t really get it, that he connects with his admirers (who are neither a majority nor a plurality of Americans) on a nonfactual level of grievance-sharing and a desire to believe that certain false things are true, and certain things that won’t fix their problems will. (Like the wall.)

What set me off on this post was the Washington Post headline, mentioned above: “Trump and Republicans settle on fear — and falsehoods — as a midterm strategy.”

More an argument

The headline is more an argument, or a critique, than a fact. Arguments and critiques have their place, but when such an assertion appears as a headline on a news story, it is evidence of the breakdown of the old model.

Having pointed out Trump’s many, many falsehoods, and having Trump continue repeating the old ones while adding new ones, pretty much every day, the Post headline writers apparently decided that the old norms of what a headline could say no longer sufficed; that the simple summary that Trump lies, all the time, and his followers don’t mind, rises to the level of an established fact, suitable for headline type.

I don’t disagree with the headline writers. I don’t expect any Trump admirers to be surprised to learn that Washington Post headline writers have concluded what they did about their guy. I don’t expect them to believe it. I don’t expect them to care.

The assumption on which the old model was based, that people want accurate facts (and that the journalistic method is a way of conveying those facts and separating them from falsehoods, to serve an audience that wants to know the truth), is dead, dying or taking on water at an alarming rate.

I’m pretty worried.

Trump on the migrants heading north

The Post story includes, for example, this, about the migrants heading toward the United States’ southern border:

“You’re going to find MS-13, you’re going to find Middle Eastern, you’re going to find everything. And guess what? We’re not allowing them in our country,” Trump said, when asked by reporters Wednesday if he had any proof of terrorists infiltrating the caravan. “We want safety.”

And this:

Many of the president’s assertions are false or clear distortions of the facts. Trump is incorrect, for example, in his claim that Democrats will “destroy” both Medicare and Social Security, while he has made both programs “stronger.” There is also no evidence that Democrats are paying for the migrant caravan snaking its way north toward the southern border, while voter fraud remains exceedingly rare. 

But that has not stopped the president from repeating such false or misleading claims, in part because advisers say his key midterm strategy is to fuel Republican turnout by riling up his most avid supporters, often through frightening and emotional appeals. 

Speaking of the mob of Latin Americans who are marching toward the U.S. border:

… In tweets Monday, Trump warned without offering evidence that “criminals and unknown Middle Easterners are mixed in” and urged voters to ‘think of and blame the Democrats for not giving us the votes to change our pathetic Immigration Laws!’ A Trump-backed immigration plan failed to pass earlier this year, but not just because of Democrats: 14 Republicans also opposed the bill. 

And this:

Trump’s claim — again, without providing evidence — that Middle Easterners are “mixed in” with the caravan is an example of how some leaders blend a mix of fact and fiction to instill fear in their electorate, said Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a New York University professor who studies authoritarian rulers.

“This is the way propaganda works,” Ben-Ghiat said. “You put different enemies together that really have nothing to do with one another. He’s trying to create this image of a wave of people of color, or threats, who are coming to invade the border.”

And this:

At last Thursday’s rally in Missoula, Mont., Trump alleged without evidence that Democrats were paying migrants to enter the United States so that they could vote for Democratic candidates.

“A lot of money’s been passing to people to come up and try to get to the border by Election Day, because they think that’s a negative for us,” Trump said. He added that Democrats like”‘the illegal immigration onslaught” because “everybody coming in is going to vote Democrat.”

The president went on to posit that some of the migrants attempting to cross the border into the United States were “hardened criminals” and “bad people,” but again declined to cite any evidence.

When a reporter asked him for an example, he dismissed her question with, “Oh, please, please, don’t be a baby.”

The full Post piece is here.

Candidates make final pitches for two citywide Minneapolis school board seats

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On Election Day, Minneapolis voters will be asked to select two citywide school board representatives. These board members are tasked with keeping a pulse on the needs of all schools and families — not just those in their neighborhood area.

They have their work cut out for them, as the Minneapolis Public Schools district works to resolve a chronic budgetary deficit and address longstanding educational disparities. They’ll also be faced with two major tasks just a few months into their term: fine-tuning the district’s new strategic plan and deciding whether to renew Superintendent Ed Graff’s contract.

At-large board member Kim Ellison ran unopposed for her seat in 2016. This year, however, the two open at-large seats generated more interest.

Based on the primary election results, there’s one clear front-runner: Kimberly Caprini, an active parent who’s spent years studying up on board policies and practices. She secured 30 percent of the total votes cast.

[cms_ad:x100]Caprini stood nearly 10,000 votes ahead of the next top contender: incumbent Rebecca Gagnon. But the margins between Gagnon and the two other contenders who advanced to the General Election — Josh Pauly and Sharon El-Amin — were much slimmer.

In addition, three board members representing certain areas of the district are running for re-election unopposed: Nelson Inz, Siad Ali and Jenny Arneson.

They’re not having to compete for a seat on the nine-member board this time around. But they’re still preoccupied with the fate of another district-related item on this year’s ballot: a two-part referendum, totaling $30 million.

Minneapolis voters will be asked to consider an $18 million increase to the existing operating levy — which is used to pay for everything from staff salaries and benefits to classroom supplies and special student support services — and to establish a $12 million tech levy to support technology upgrades and maintenance expenses that the district currently covers with dollars from its general fund.

While the referendum doesn’t seem to have generated a whole lot of attention, compared to the clamor produced by organized opposition in years past, the at-large school board race has been defined by a couple of flash points.

Gagnon has had to answer, time and time again, for her move this past spring to reallocate $6.4 million to secondary schools, which got blowback from many — including other board members — who considered the decision inequitable. Meanwhile, El-Amin got called out for anti-LGBTQ comments she’d made on social media a few years ago and has been working through apologies and reconciliation both online and in-person with those concerned about her old posts.

Through a combination of one-on-one interviews and insight gleaned from the Oct. 15 candidate forum hosted by ISAIAH and a handful of other groups at the Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church, here’s a look at how the four at-large candidates have positioned themselves heading into the home stretch.

Kimberly Caprini

On a cold Saturday morning earlier this month, Caprini, 54,  joined Pauly at Lake Nokomis to thank a handful of volunteers who’d shown up to go door knocking on behalf of the duo. The two have partnered up on a number of campaign activities because they share two key stamps of approval: endorsements from the DFL Party and the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers.

Even though school board races are supposed to be nonpartisan, these endorsements give recipients a distinct advantage in terms of support on the campaign trail — a factor that likely came to bear in 2016, when Caprini ran for a District 2 seat without both endorsements and lost by just 201 votes to the recipient of both: Kerry Jo Felder.

[cms_ad:x101]After that loss, Caprini notes, she continued to show at up school board meetings, where she is a regular attendee. Her advocacy in the district began over 12 years ago, when her oldest daughter enrolled in the district. And she’s confident that all of the groundwork she’s done over the years — studying up on board policies, participating on board committees, meeting with the district’s chief financial officer to better understand the budget, and even watching archived board meeting videos — will help secure her a seat on the board this time around.

“I do have a higher level of trust than I did before, with the district. I think a lot of it has to do with being so present, and being in those spaces,” she said. “But I feel like I have this watchdog mentality, because I know where we’ve been.”

Kimberly Caprini
MinnPost photo by Erin Hinrichs
Kimberly Caprini’s confident that all of the groundwork she’s done over the years will help secure her a seat on the board this time around.
She intends to hold office hours across the city to ensure she’s hearing from all parents. This commitment ties into her top priority: restoring trust in the district while still pushing for greater financial and academic accountability.

“I’m a great negotiator. I’m an awesome collaborator. And I’m a damn good listener,” she said, noting she doesn’t have patience for board members not doing their homework prior to making important decisions.

Her other priorities include raising expectations for all students and empowering parents to help bring additional resources into their schools. This means building new community partnerships that can help keep students — especially middle-schoolers — engaged through extracurricular activities.

Sharon El-Amin

A newcomer to the ballot, El-Amin, 47, came out of the primary with about 20 percent of the total votes cast — enough to secure her a spot in the General Election and give her a strong confidence boost.

El-Amin entered the race a bit later on and unsuccessfully sought the DFL and teachers union endorsements. But her family’s name recognition on the northside — through being a former small-business owner and active member of the Muslim faith community, as well as being related to the pro basketball player from North High School, Khalid El-Amin — helped her build a base of loyal supporters.

While she’s not the only district parent in the candidate pool, she’s made her identity and experiences as a parent advocate, who’s actively engaged at North High School, the pillar of her campaign.

“We need parents to understand that we should be stepping up and wanting to be part of the board, and not letting them go uncontested,” she said. “Parents have to get back involved. Our investment is our children. And we have to protect our investment.”

She’s promised to make herself available to constituents to hear their concerns. More specifically, she says she’d pushing the district to “over-communicate” to parents, to ensure everyone is well-informed and equipped with the information they need to weigh in on important decisions made by the board. At the school level, that means checking in with parent groups at each school, she says. And helping to create parent groups at schools that don’t currently have formal parent representation.

Sharon El-Amin entered the race a bit later on and unsuccessfully sought the DFL and teachers union endorsements.
MinnPost photo by Erin Hinrichs
Sharon El-Amin entered the race a bit later on and unsuccessfully sought the DFL and teachers union endorsements.
“Even if it’s one or two parents, we have to start something,” she said, noting this all too often a “huge piece that’s missing” when it comes to representation in the district.

A few anti-LGBTQ posts she’d put on her social media accounts in 2015 and 2016 resurfaced after the primary, threatening to derail her campaign. In response, she engaged with those who had raised concerns about her archived comments — through both online conversations and in-person meetings — to apologize and reassure them she’ll be an ally for all students.

“I was [caught] off guard because I know I’m not a person who tries to hurt anyone,” she said. “But, from that, I have met a lot of really strong people in our community, built some relationships, and continue to go strong.”

Rebecca Gagnon

Seeking a third term on the school board, Gagnon, 47, has served as board treasurer and board chair. Beyond this role, she has additional governing experience, including her current role as a member of the National Assessment Governing Board.

She dropped out of a Minnesota House of Representatives race earlier this year and entered the school board race as a late entry in June. She’s endorsed by the city’s mayor, Jacob Frey, and a handful of other elected officials and teachers.

On the campaign trail, she often grounds her answers in examples that point to her track record of board actions and constituent services — something that sets her apart from her competitors who are looking to secure a foothold on the board.

For instance, when asked to respond to the transportation hardships placed on highly mobile families, she talked about expediting a solution for a family that had reached out to her directly.

“We have to be way better at customer service. It is very helpful when my name is passed to constituents. I get calls nearly every day, and transportation is a lot of it,” she said, noting this work holds her accountable “because you know if one person is experiencing it, it’s not just one person.”

Rebecca Gagnon dropped out of a Minnesota House of Representatives race earlier this year and entered the school board race as a late entry in June.
MinnPost photo by Erin Hinrichs
Rebecca Gagnon dropped out of a Minnesota House of Representatives race earlier this year and entered the school board race as a late entry in June.
Gagnon continues to say that her top priority is “financial stability and sustainability of the district.” She’s proud of the work she and her colleagues have done thus far, in hiring Graff and kick-starting the creation of a new strategic plan. But she wants to create a system that’s more “stable and predictable.”

She’s also focused on bringing wrap-around services in to the schools that need them, and better aligning academic offerings with workforce needs.

While she’s built inroads with lots of voters, she’s also found herself in the center of controversies during her tenure. Most recently, her move this past spring to reallocate $6.4 million to secondary schools sparked a communitywide debate over what equitable budgeting in a district with schools serving a spectrum of affluent and impoverished families should look like.

Gagnon says she doesn’t mind if people disagree with what she did. But she says it’s been mischaracterized as a “loud south issue” — something she’s continually asked about while door knocking or otherwise talking with voters.

Josh Pauly

Seeking a seat as the only millennial on the school board, Pauly, 31, has sailed through election season without having to respond to any strong criticisms. This is his first try at an elected office, so he decided to step away from the classroom this year to put a full-time effort into his bid for a school board seat.

“People have really coalesced around this message and vision I have — of good governance and leadership,” he said, noting he’d bring a “fresh perspective” and “on-the-ground experience” as a former teacher in the district.

In addition to participating in all of the standard campaign strategies — door knocking in neighborhoods across the city, holding meet and greets and showing up at community events — Pauly has been diversifying his campaign efforts to reach new voters. For instance, he’s been connecting with younger voters through a mobile texting app and has been intentional about going door knocking in apartments, on local college campuses and out in the community.

From his conversations with voters he says a general theme has emerged: At the hyperlocal level, the general stance is “I love my school, but what’s going on with the district?

Outside of the school board race, he’s involved in two nonprofits — one aimed at building more civic engagement and another that’s focused on getting culturally relevant books in the hands of elementary students.

Josh Pauly
MinnPost photo by Erin Hinrichs
Seeking a seat as the only millennial on the school board, Josh Pauly, 31, has sailed through election season without having to respond to any strong criticisms.
When it comes to setting himself apart from the competition, he’s leaning heavily on his three years of teaching experience, gained as a teacher at Sanford Middle School, to convince voters that he’d work in the best interests of students, teachers and families. Along these lines, he’s talked about adequately — and equitably — resourcing classrooms, reducing class sizes and increasing the number of wrap-around services available at all schools.

“I’ve seen what happens when you don’t have them [wrap-around services],” he said in an interview, noting the teacher may be highly qualified, but if their students don’t have access to basic necessities like stable housing, “they’re not concerned about the math test.”

It’s a reality he experienced growing up in a single-parent household, he said at the forum. Additionally, if elected, in an effort to address deeply entrenched racial discipline disparities in the district, he says he’d push to make restorative-practices training mandatory for all teachers.  

Crowdfunding sites raise millions for dubious treatments, study finds

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Yet another study is raising concerns about some of the medical crowdfunding campaigns that are being run on popular sites such as GoFundMe and YouCaring.

In a paper published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), researchers report that 1,059 U.S. and Canadian medical crowdfunding campaigns raised nearly $6.8 million during a recent two-year period for several treatments that are scientifically unproven and/or known to be potentially dangerous.

“Assuming that the funds raised are spent to pay for these treatments, donors indirectly contributed millions of dollars to practitioners to deliver dubious, possibly unsafe care,” write the authors of the paper.

In many situations, crowdfunding can be a way for individuals and families who lack the necessary health insurance to pay for expensive treatments for medical illnesses or for traumatic injuries. It can also help pay travel and other expenses associated with being in a government-approved clinical trial for promising new drugs or other interventions.

[cms_ad:x100]But such campaigns are being increasing used to raise money for bogus treatments that offer no benefit to the patient — and may actually do harm.

Study details

For the JAMA paper, Dr. Ford Vox, a brain injury specialist and medical ethicist at the Shepherd Center in Atlanta, and his colleagues searched for activity around unsupported medical treatments on four crowdfunding sites — GoFundMe, YouCaring, CrowdRise and FundRazr — between November 2015 and December 2017. They looked only at fundraising campaigns for patients living in the United States and Canada.

The researchers also narrowed their search to terms related to five particularly popular spurious treatments: homeopathy or naturopathy for cancer, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) for brain injury, stem cell therapy for brain injury and spinal cord injury, and long-term antibiotic therapy for “chronic Lyme disease.”

All of those treatments are without scientific support. The homeopathy, naturopathy and hyperbaric oxygen therapies are ineffective, while the other two treatments not only offer no medical benefits, but also can cause serious — and even life-threatening — side effects.

Here’s how Vox and his colleagues describe the results of their study in a Health Affairs blog posting:

[W]e found a total of $6.77 million raised for the five treatment categories we targeted, most of it ($3.46 million) going to homeopathic and naturopathic quack cancer cures. Donors chipped in $1.2 million toward helping expose 188 people to stems cells for brain injury, which is highly concerning, given that the consequences can be devastating: strokes, infections, or death. While there are a number of real medical trials underway (for which subjects needn’t raise funds to participate), there are no legitimate, safe stem cell treatments for brain injury on the market.

The same situation applies to spinal cord injury, where victims have paid enormous amounts to receive stem cell injections only to be re-victimized, this time by unethical providers. We found that well-meaning donors gave $590,446 to 93 campaigns seeking money for spinal cord stem cell treatments.

The study also revealed that crowdfunding campaigns had raised almost $700,000 (out of a desired $2.1 million) to fund long-term antibiotic therapy for chronic Lyme disease.

“Many of these campaigns hadn’t closed at the time of our research and likely went on raising money,” the researchers add. “In total, the campaigns in all treatment areas combined sought over $27 million.”

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Additional findings

Almost all — 98 percent — of the crowdfunding campaigns appeared on GoFundMe. YouCaring had the other 2 percent. None were found on CrowdRise or FundRazr.

The researchers were also able to identify nine practitioners and eight countries that patients intended to visit with their crowdfunded money. These destinations included clinics in Germany and Mexico for homeopathic or naturopathic cancer therapies, a New Orleans clinic for HBOT for brain injury, and clinics in the U.S., Panama, Thailand, India, China and Mexico for stem cell therapies.

“This money is wasted at best and harmful at worst,” write Vox and his colleagues in the Health Affairs blog. “We believe that real harm is likely to have occurred in this snapshot of the market we observed, though we do not have a means to measure such harm. In the case of cancer, researchers have documented dramatically increased death rates in people who chose to pursue alternative medicine avenues over conventional care.”

“GoFundMe and its competitors must allocate appropriate resources to monitor, flag, and downplay problematic campaigns, and users need to remain vigilant about where they donate and why,” they conclude.

Confirming earlier research

Leigh Turner, a University of Minnesota bioethicist who is one of the country’s leading critics of clinics marketing unproven stem cell treatments to patients, agrees. Earlier this year, he published in JAMA a study that identified 408 crowdfunding campaigns seeking $7.4 million in donations for unproven stem cell interventions within a single four-month period on two popular websites, GoFundMe and YouCaring. By the end of that four-month period, the campaigns had raised $1.4 million from more than 13,000 donors.

Leigh Turner
Leigh Turner
In an e-mail exchange with MinnPost, Turner said he was particularly struck with the findings from the new JAMA study regarding the large amount of money being raised for homeopathic and naturopathic interventions for cancer.

“These jarring numbers prompt questions about the total number of individuals using crowdfunding campaigns for homeopathic remedies or naturopathic interventions that are not evidence-based,” he said.

Turner believes crowdfunding sites need to do more to help people evaluate the scientific validity of the medical claims behind treatments for which money is being raised. Right now, most sites disavow any responsibility for the content of campaigns and, instead, simply encourage people to “do their homework,” he explained.

Turner wants crowdfunding sites to stop “serving as echo chambers for companies marketing unproven interventions.” The sites should develop screening tools to distinguish “evidence-based medical claims from hyperbole, misinformation, and even outright fraudulent advertising,” he said, and they should also refuse to host campaigns connected to companies that are marketing medical treatments known to be unproven, useless or dangerous.

What donors can do

Until those actions are taken, however, prospective donors are going to have to do their own due diligence.

“They should look into the kinds of interventions individuals are seeking and evaluate whether or not these purported interventions have any realistic chance of being helpful,” advised Turner. “They should also investigate the clinics where medical interventions mentioned in campaigns are provided and try to determine whether these facilities engaged in evidence-based medicine or have a reputation for running scams and engaging in quackery. They should also make sure that individuals seeking donations can be trusted and are not taking advantage of crowdfunding sites to mislead prospective donors.”

“While there are no guaranteed ways to avoid being misled, prospective donors to crowdfunding campaigns can take steps to increase the likelihood that they are providing support for campaigns seeking funding for evidence-based medical interventions rather than for campaigns requesting donations for unproven and risky procedures,” he added.

FMI: You’ll find an abstract of the new JAMA study on the journal’s website.

As Eighth District Democrats fight to survive, Republicans are confident this is finally their year

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Clint Austin/Forum News Service
Pete Stauber, far right, has insisted he would not do anything to limit access to care for those with pre-existing conditions, and has declared he would not support plans to cut Social Security or Medicare.
On a crisp, clear Monday morning two weeks before the November 6 midterms, Joe Radinovich stood before a crowd of retirees and soon-to-be retirees at the Labor Temple in Duluth, talking about the stakes for the hard-fought race in Minnesota’s 8th Congressional District.

The 32-year old Democrat from Crosby was in Duluth to receive the endorsement of the Alliance for Retired Americans, the AFL-CIO labor union’s advocacy group for seniors. Standing in front of a portrait of the late Sen. Paul Wellstone, surrounded by mementos of this region’s proud tradition of organized labor, Radinovich delivered a stump speech similar to ones given by many Democrats before him.

He explained why he is a Democrat, invoking his great-grandparents, who came to northeastern Minnesota from Yugoslavia to work the mines. Programs like Social Security helped their family build a middle-class life, and to hear Radinovich tell it, Republicans in D.C. — and his opponent in this race, Pete Stauber — would destroy the pillars of the social safety net through tax-cut giveaways and austerity-driven budget cuts.

“They all said the reason the deficit exists is not because of tax cuts,” Radinovich said of Republicans like Speaker Paul Ryan. “They said the reason this deficit exists is because of Social Security and Medicare and that we need to what they call ‘reform’ these programs.”

[cms_ad:x100]“We should take them at their word,” Radinovich said, to nods and murmurs among the crowd. “Let me be clear about this: Social Security and Medicare have built the middle class in this country and under my watch they’re not going anywhere!”

The crowd cheered as Radinovich brought down his big applause line, but lurking in the Labor Temple was an uncomfortable truth for many Democrats: their candidate is an underdog. Stauber, fueled by the region’s swell of support for President Donald Trump in 2016, is seen as the GOP’s best candidate to flip a Democratic-held U.S. House seat anywhere in the country.

Republicans have spent close to $6 million on ads attacking Radinovich; some Democrats privately concede that northeastern Minnesota — represented by a Democrat for all but two of the last 80 years — may have slipped out of the party’s grasp.

Stauber is all smiles heading into election day, basking in the local and national media’s focus on his candidacy, which is touted as a lone bright spot for Republicans in what’s shaping up to be a tough election for the GOP. Radinovich, meanwhile, says he’s down, not out, and in the home stretch is focusing on Democrats’ bread-and-butter basics — while acknowledging that the DFL stronghold of his parents and grandparents is more history now than reality.

Issues, and personal issues

“I used to start these things with joking about having to hitchhike from the penitentiary,” Radinovich cracked to the audience in Duluth before launching into his stump speech.

The deep-pocketed GOP outside groups backing Stauber have run endless ads hitting Radinovich on his support for Medicare-for-All and his voting record in the state legislature — he served a term from 2013 to 2015 — but they’ve also gone after his past, which is littered with parking tickets, along with failures to appear in court and one marijuana-related drug charge from when he was 18. (One ad from the Congressional Leadership Fund, the super PAC linked to Speaker Ryan, wove the threads together: “Joe Radinovich votes to raise our taxes, but refuses to pay his own bills.”)

People in the 8th, which includes Duluth, the Iron Range, and exurban communities north of the Twin Cities, are accustomed to intense politics. In 2014 and 2016, the district was home to some of the closest, and most expensive, congressional races in the country, in which allies of DFL Rep. Rick Nolan and Republican candidate Stewart Mills flooded the airwaves with negative ads. (Nolan is retiring at the end of this term.)

Joe Radinovich was in Duluth to receive the endorsement of the Alliance for Retired Americans, the AFL-CIO labor union’s advocacy group for seniors.
MinnPost photo by Sam Brodey
Joe Radinovich was in Duluth to receive the endorsement of the Alliance for Retired Americans, the AFL-CIO labor union’s advocacy group for seniors.
Radinovich argues that outside GOP groups are spending so much to back up Stauber because they know this seat is critical to their hopes of retaining a majority in Congress, and their hopes of passing more tax cuts and implementing cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, as various Republican leaders have indicated.

“If we were to debate on the issues, we’d win this race in a landslide,” Radinovich told MinnPost later that day, sitting in the cafeteria of the Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College in Cloquet, where he had just done a question-and-answer session with DFL lieutenant governor nominee Peggy Flanagan. “They want to make it about my parking tickets, or that pot ticket I got, but the reality of the situation is, this is about our economic survival and livelihood in places like this.”

[cms_ad:x101]In CD8, which is more economically challenged than other corners of the state, health care might as well be shorthand for economic survival. The issue has emerged as maybe the singular fault line between Radinovich and Stauber, and Democrats have worked to paint Stauber as a rubber stamp for Trump, who backed a GOP health care bill that would have, according to most independent experts, endangered access to care for people with pre-existing conditions.

Stauber has insisted he would not do anything to limit access to care for those with pre-existing conditions, and has declared he would not support plans to cut Social Security or Medicare. He has run ads featuring his teenage son, Isaac, who has Down syndrome — which is treated as a pre-existing condition by insurers — to back up his bona fides on the issue.

In an interview, Stauber did not say whether he would have supported the GOP plan to repeal and replace Obamacare that was considered in Congress last year. “I wasn’t in Congress to help with that legislation,” he said.

The Republican has been on the offensive on health care, too, slamming Radinovich on his support for Medicare-for-All, which he brands as a “full-throttle government takeover” of health care.

“We need to come together in a true fashion, a bipartisan way, and not care who gets the credit,” Stauber said. “We need to work at solutions to lower cost and increase access. That does not have to come with a full-blown government takeover.”

Feeling ‘congressional’

Even though health care has animated CD8’s debates and filled its attack ads, Stauber sometimes seems like he’d rather be focusing on other things — particularly the impact of the GOP’s tax cut bill. “Jobs and the economy are huge,” Stauber said.

On Monday, up the road from Radinovich’s Q&A, Stauber was in Two Harbors, focusing on something more parochial: how business is at Castle Danger Brewery. Touring its facility in the North Shore town, Stauber — a former police officer who is now a St. Louis County commissioner — peppered staff with questions about their business, from the tax rates they pay to how their canning line works.

“Oh, for heaven’s sake,” Stauber remarked, stepping up close to the canning line to take in the way the brewery’s air compressing system prepared aluminum cans to be filled with the precise amount of beer. (Today, it was their 17-7 Pale Ale.)

Stauber doesn’t need a trip to a brewery to feel upbeat these days: in the past few weeks, a big poll showed him ahead, he’s locked down overwhelming support from national GOP groups, and earned coverage in the New York Times and on MSNBC, both of which featured him as the counterpoint to the Democratic “blue wave” narrative for the 2018 midterms.

There’s also the president: Trump came to Duluth in June — his first campaign stop in Minnesota — to stump for Stauber; he tweeted out a photo of the two of them sitting in the presidential limo.

Stauber and other Republicans maintain that Trump’s support in the 8th District, where he won precincts a Republican hasn’t won since the 1920s, has not wavered.  “There’s a lot of support for our president and the initiatives he’s put forward, his unwavering support for mining, timber products, jobs and the economy,” Stauber said. He is quick with anecdotes from the campaign trail, like a recent meet-and-greet in Mountain Iron — a town at the heart of the Iron Range — where he said the crowd was standing-room only.

Since tea-party darling Chip Cravaack knocked off longtime DFL Rep. Jim Oberstar in 2010 — and was defeated by Rick Nolan two years later — the 8th, and the Iron Range in particular, has been something of a white whale for Republicans.

What is it about Stauber that has Republicans sure this district is finally in their grasp? Those involved in the race say it’s his profile — hockey star, former cop, family man — and natural political ability. The Hermantown native seemingly sees someone he knows at every campaign stop — at Castle Danger, it was a fireman buddy — to the exasperation of his staff.

Jason Carroll, chair of the Republican Party in Chisago County, at the district’s southern, more conservative edge, there’s a noticeably more energized feeling among Republicans than there has been in years past. He noted that Trump’s influence has endured among what he called “JFK Democrats” who bucked the political recommendations of labor unions to support the Republican candidate in 2016.

But Stauber’s profile, he says, is what is making the difference for Republicans this year. “We definitely feel like this is a race where we say we have a candidate that’s heads and shoulders above his opponent,” he told MinnPost.

“With Stauber you really feel you have the person that’s been working to get past the finish line for so long,” Carroll said. “He’s feeling congressional.”

The ‘same old coalition’

In campaign emails and stump speeches, Radinovich acknowledges that his campaign is at a disadvantage heading into the home stretch. (“Based on our polling, this is still a race we can win,” he said at the event at the Labor Temple.)

The DFL stalwarts who came to see Radinovich speak were hopeful that Trump’s wave did not turn this district red for good. Alan Netland, president of the Northeast Minnesota Labor Council, a local branch of the AFL-CIO, noted that CD8 saw the biggest swing from Obama to Trump of any district in the country.

“The question now for a lot of people who voted for Trump,” he said, “is, was it a philosophical change from one party to another, or was it because they were mad about a whole lot of stuff?”

DFL State Rep. Mike Sundin, who represents a Carlton County district, knows and likes both Radinovich and Stauber, but believes the Republican won’t back up working-class residents of the district. “He’s jumped on the Trump bandwagon,” Sundin said. “I don’t think it’s going to play throughout the entire district.”

Radinovich told MinnPost that the essence of Trump’s message — “we need someone to disrupt the system and flip the table” — appealed to people in the 8th. “People do know that Washington, D.C., is broke,” he said, “and the deck is stacked against people here. They recognize they need something different in Washington, and Pete Stauber is going to be more of the same.”

Coming into the campaign’s final stretch, Radinovich claimed that voters are starting to see though the flood of GOP attacks against him. “They’re starting to ask the appropriate questions, why are they spending so much money to send Pete Stauber to Congress?”

But he’s also going on the attack: though his party’s major outside group, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, canceled its remaining ad buys here, Radinovich raised an impressive $1.2 million over the summer, and he’s using the money to fund ads questioning Stauber’s use of his official St. Louis County email account to communicate with GOP campaign entities in Washington. (The county will not release the emails; the DFL Party has filed a lawsuit to compel them to do so.)

DFL officials have suggested Stauber could just release the emails and are questioning what he’s hiding. When asked, Stauber did not say if he would be comfortable with the content of those emails being public, and countered the issue was manufactured by Radinovich’s “floundering campaign.”

To many Democrats, losing this race would be a tough pill to swallow. Trump and Stauber’s seemingly broad appeal may be scrambling the political calculus of the district: “There’s always changes happening in politics,” Radinovich said, acknowledging the turn of CD8.

The Democrat, who is the youngest candidate to run in a top-tier Minnesota congressional race in years, said a new DFL coalition is replacing the “same old coalition” that has led the party to victory here for decades.

“While some people might be moving away from the Democratic Party, there are other people who are coming toward us… You’re going to see more women coming out to vote, young people are engaged.”

Radinovich’s appearance with Flanagan at the Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College put a fine point on that argument; while he was speaking with MinnPost, a sweatshirt-wearing college student introduced himself and sat down, waiting for the candidate’s interview to wrap so he could talk with him.

“It’s a brutal, nasty election that we could win,” he said, “just like it is every couple of years here in the 8th District.”

More on Trump’s relationship to facts and truth

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A brief follow-up to this morning’s post about Donald Trump’s relationship to facts and truth, and how it challenges the old norms on which the journalistic model of facticity was based.

On Monday, the president tweeted:

Sadly, it looks like Mexico’s Police and Military are unable to stop the Caravan heading to the Southern Border of the United States. Criminals and unknown Middle Easterners are mixed in. I have alerted Border Patrol and Military that this is a National Emergy. Must change laws!

On Tuesday, pressed further on whether he had any evidence that Middle Easterners were using the caravan to sneak into the United States, he said:

[cms_ad:x100]“Well, they could very well be.”

When the reporter pressed on proof once again, Trump said, “There’s no proof of anything. There’s no proof of anything. But they could very well be.”

So, would an old-school, nothing-but-the-facts journalist be justified in writing that Trump admitted that he lied when he asserted that the caravan included “unknown Middle Easterners … mixed in?”

NBC News used it as an example of how Trump does this. The headline “Trump admits there’s no proof of his claims about the migrant caravan.” They didn’t say Trump had “lied,” because, as I mentioned in the previous post, calling something a “lie” used to border on going nuclear.

But Trump constantly says things, which sound like factual assertions, that turn out to be false. He often says something the next day that contradicts, or half-takes-back, what he said the day before. He either does not understand or has no respect for the old-school notion if you assert something that sounds factual, and that something is false, you are lying or, at least misleading.

We used to take honesty, about facts, especially from a president, seriously. With Trump that is impossible. So, do you say he “lied,” which in the old days was a serious charge? Do you say he misled the media, by stating something slightly ambiguous that he could not back up? Is it reasonable to assume that the misleading was intentional, which makes it pretty much a lie? Do you owe it to the office of the president to give him the benefit of the doubt that perhaps, when he said that “unknown Middle Easterners are mixed in” he meant that he didn’t know this but was speculating about something that was perhaps true?

This is just one puzzling aspect of life in the Age of Trump. But there is a point at which it is no longer reasonable to give him the benefit of the doubt. So, as I said earlier, it used to be a big deal to accuse the president of lying to the nation. Nowadays it’s more like trying to figure out what category of lie Trump has just uttered.


Avian influenza discovered in Kandiyohi County turkey flock

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War on Thanksgiving. Tom Cherveny at the West Central Tribune has a piece on a turkey flock in Kandiyohi County tested positive for an avian flu: “The Minnesota Board of Animal Health reported Tuesday that it has confirmed a case of H5N2 low pathogenic avian influenza (known as H5N2 LPAI) in a commercial turkey flock in Kandiyohi County. The disease was detected during routine surveillance testing of the flock of 10,000 13-week-old turkey toms on October 19. … H5N2 LPAI does not pose a risk to the public, and there is no food safety concern for consumers.”

Coen Brothers movie plot. Sarah Horner at the Pioneer Press has an odd story of one man’s attempt at obtaining a visa to stay in the U.S.: “A Mexican immigrant in the United States illegally was bound with duct tape and left near Randolph Avenue in St. Paul as part of his own kidnapping ruse to try to fraudulently obtain a visa designed to help crime victims, authorities say.”

Worst air quality in the state. KSTP covered the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency announcement on air quality tests conducted in north Minneapolis: “The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) announced this week that air quality tests show there is too much lead and metal in the air at an industrial park located south of Lowry Avenue and west of the Mississippi River. ‘The lead concentrations are higher than any other site we have in the state,’ said MPCA Assistant Commissioner David Thornton.”

Chilling tale. Caitlin Anderson at the Minnesota Daily has a profile of an astrophysicist from the University of Minnesota who has broken the world record for the most winters spent in the South Pole: “[Robert] Schwarz began his time in the South Pole by what he calls a pure coincidence. Waiting for his professor to get off a phone call during his graduate studies in Munich, he came across an advertisement to go to the South Pole for a year to work on a telescope. This started a chain of winters leading up to him breaking the world record for the most winters spent in the South Pole.”

[cms_ad:x100]Roll the bones. Hannah Jones at City Pages knows where the bodies are buried: “By the late 1800s, the cemetery fell into neglect, and the city condemned it. In 1884, just over 1,300 bodies and 82 monuments were spirited away for reburial in the nearby Hillside and Lakewood Cemeteries, as a gesture of respect for the dead. But the other 3,700 corpses … they’re thought to have remained.

In other news…

I’ll take it black, I guess: “Plastic straws, stir sticks are out on Delta flights and Sky Clubs” [Star Tribune]

No Peter Graves grave:Bury me in Minnesota: A semi-comprehensive guide to our state’s celebrity graves” [City Pages]

What could go wrong?City of Minneapolis will stop inspecting tanning beds, tattoo parlors due to lack of funding” [Star Tribune]

Coffee jones:CBD drinks to bring new energy to Dinkytown” [Minnesota Daily]

Pouring some Durkee French fried onions out: “Woman who created green bean casserole dies at 92” [Star Tribune]

Tax isn’t the way to reduce the misuse of opioids

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Fortunately, the opioid epidemic has become a central point of debate in our state’s gubernatorial election. Addiction and overdose have hit Minnesota particularly hard, and our next governor will surely play a significant role in future efforts to stop this public health crisis. However, statements made by candidate Tim Walz highlight a misunderstanding on how to combat the crisis we face. I am referring to his support of an opioid surcharge, more commonly referred to in Minnesota as the “penny-per-pill” tax.

[cms_ad:x100]The logic behind the tax is shaky at best. Yes, a surcharge on opioid distribution could limit opioid prescriptions across the state, but not in a way that would effectively reduce addiction and overdoses. It could, instead, limit medications and increase health care costs for the thousands of patients across Minnesota with legitimate pain-management needs.

Debilitating pain is often a real side effect of very common chronic conditions, including arthritis, cancer, and kidney disease. Without prescription opioids, individuals managing these illnesses would not be able to effectively manage their pain — or live comfortable, productive lives.

We were fortunate to see the opioid tax fail last legislative session. But support clearly remains among current and prospective members of our state government. It is critical that Minnesotans come to recognize the harm that this kind of tax could do to our state’s chronic pain patients.

MinnPost welcomes original letters from readers on current topics of general interest. Interested in joining the conversation? Submit your letter to the editor. The choice of letters for publication is at the discretion of MinnPost editors; they will not be able to respond to individual inquiries about letters.

Minnesota man sues Vatican to release files on abusive priests

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Says Jean Hopfensperger for the Strib, “Jim Keenan, a Twin Cities clergy abuse survivor, is one of two plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday against the Vatican, demanding it release its files on thousands of priests who have sexually abused children. The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court-Northern District of California by St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson, who argued the Vatican is the central repository for the names and histories of priests worldwide who have been engaged in misconduct, and is endangering others by not revealing their identities.”

Peter Cox of MPR reports, “First Avenue announced Wednesday that it has agreed to buy the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul from Minnesota Public Radio. Terms of the tentative deal were not disclosed. First Avenue owner Dayna Frank said the Minneapolis-based operator of music clubs was ‘excited about the opportunities for more events and performances in another iconic space in this community’. MPR CEO Jon McTaggart said in a statement Wednesday said the sale of the nearby theater would allow the company to better serve other audiences, but he expects part of the relationship to continue.”

In the Strib, J. Patrick Coolican writes, “Democratic candidate for governor Tim Walz declared his support for an increase in the state minimum wage to $15 on Wednesday, after initially seeming to backtrack from that support at a news conference. At a news conference with a group of mayors, Walz, a southern Minnesota congressman, called the $15 pledge ‘aspirational,’ then declined to say specifically what increase he thinks is immediately appropriate. … Later in the day, Walz reaffirmed his support with a tweet that said, ‘I support a $15 minimum wage. I voted for a $15 minimum wage in Congress, and would be proud to sign it into law if it came to my desk as Governor.’”

[cms_ad:x100]Says Stribber John Ewoldt, “The winner of the $1.537 billion Mega Millions lottery won not once, but twice. Someone bagged one of the richest lottery jackpots in U.S. history on Tuesday night and became a multi-hundred millionaire after taxes. As well, he or she bought the ticket in a state where they can choose to remain anonymous. The winning ticket, not yet claimed, was purchased in South Carolina, one of only eight states that allow winners to avoid having their name made public. The others are Delaware, Kansas, Maryland, North Dakota, Ohio and Texas. Georgia also allows its winners to remain private if the prize is larger than $250,000. Minnesota requires its winners to go public.”

A Bloomberg story by Arit John says, “From the Iron Range in the north to soybean farms in the south, the defining dynamics of this year’s U.S. congressional elections are playing out in four Minnesota House races that both parties view as bellwethers for the midterm election. Democrats are counting on anti-Trump sentiment in the affluent, well-educated suburbs around Minneapolis to knock out two GOP incumbents. Republicans have an edge in contests for two open seats in rural districts that voted for President Donald Trump by 15 and 16 points but had been held by Democrats. The shift in Minnesota, and across the country, has been fueled by eroding Democratic support among non-college-educated blue-collar workers and growing support among college-educated suburban voters.”

From a Duluth News Tribune story:  “It looks like that long line at the Department of Motor Vehicles offices just got a bit longer. The state of Minnesota is rolling out three Class D driver licenses for the public to use in various capacities — the traditional standard license, as well as a new Real ID license and an Enhanced license, though the Real ID license looks to be the most practical and popular going forward. Staffs are tasked with explaining a convoluted, hyper-particular process for licensing that’s left many residents taking three or four trips to the license office just to process their applications.”

Says a WCCO-TV story on Minnesota kids. “Just over 10 percent of kids in Minnesota, ages 10 to 17, are obese, according to analysis and data released Wednesday, putting the state at the low end of the national scale. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the largest U.S. philanthropy group focused solely on health, says that when looking at national survey data from 2016 and 2017, its researchers found that Minnesota was among the states with the lowest child obesity rates. Even so, the numbers aren’t that great.”

MPR’s Tim Pugmire reports, “Former Ramsey County Attorney Tom Foley registered this week as a write-in candidate for attorney general, although he said it’s short of a full-fledged effort to win the office as an alternate candidate. Foley, who ran in the DFL’s primary in August, said friends have said they want to vote for him in the Nov. 6 election, and his move this week allows those votes to be counted. Foley insists that he is not launching an active write-in campaign against DFL candidate Keith Ellison and Republican Doug Wardlow. ‘I’m not campaigning. I’m not going out asking people to vote for me as a write-in candidate,’ he told MPR News on Wednesday. ‘But if those people who want to vote for me do vote for me, they wanted to know that the vote would be counted.’”

Women hold keys to America’s future

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The Senate hearings on Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination notwithstanding, the future of this nation is in the hands of American women. Because, as President Donald Trump perhaps cheekily stated in his Sept. 26 news conference, “Women are smarter than men.” Quantifiable data over the last 30 to 40 years appear to prove it.

Michael Fedo

Michael Fedo

While men used to attend college in significantly greater numbers than women — 58 percent to 42 percent into the 1970s — that ratio has reversed, with women making up nearly 57 percent of current college enrollees, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Last year there were 2 million more women than men attending U.S. colleges and universities. Currently women receive the majority of college degrees in this country, from associate (two-year programs), to bachelor’s, master’s, and Ph.D.s. Women also outnumber men in postdoctoral studies. And the trend predicts continued growth in women’s postsecondary enrollment, with simultaneous declines among men.

While women today earn about 60 percent of all bachelor’s degrees, they also make up nearly half of the students in the key areas of law, medicine and business. This correlates to their recent ascendance to upper levels of management and administration in these professions.

Meanwhile, boys are abandoning the quest for higher education, and there’s a concomitant corollary: They don’t read. For a variety of reasons — falling behind girls in reading in elementary school, greater incidences of schoolroom misbehavior, early peer pressure to not be classroom smart as these boys may be labeled “sissies,” or “gay” — males have chosen to become post-literate. Certainly, they don’t read books.

[cms_ad:x100]A bookstore manager once told me that women purchased 70 percent of the books he sold, including 90 percent of all fiction. He thought the figures would be similar in other stores, both independent and chains. A nonreading populace is not only less curious, and less knowledgeable, they are less able to reason and make intelligent decisions. Male CEOs and board chairs face a dinosaur future; their heretofore majority presence will be assumed by educated, bright women.

Several years ago, I watched singer/songwriter Jim Post perform his one-man show, “Mark Twain and the Laughing River,” in Galena, Illinois. During the show, Post, quoting Twain, occasionally broke in with the observation, “Boys are idiots.” By the third or fourth time he uttered the phrase, the audience was chorusing it with him. This sarcastic pronouncement in Twain’s era now seems prescient.

Which brings us to November’s elections. We all want our elected leaders to be smarter than we are. At every government level, from school boards to the halls of Congress, problems and issues require thoughtful, intelligent solutions. Education and reading-eschewing males are becoming less capable than women in dealing with contemporary concerns.

The solution seems abundantly clear: Mark your ballot with a woman’s name wherever possible.

Michael Fedo of Coon Rapids has published 10 books, most recently, “Don’t Quit Your Day Job: The Adventures of a Midlist Author.”

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Sound Unseen announces lineup of 2018 films on music

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In 2016, MovieMaker called Sound Unseen one of the “25 coolest film festivals in the world,” right up there with film fests in France, New York and Havana. Now in its 19th year, Sound Unseen is more than an annual film fest. It’s a year-round Twin Cities presence, hosting monthly screenings at the Trylon, one of the 25 coolest movie houses in the world.

Sound Unseen 2018 will take place Wednesday, Nov. 14, through Sunday, Nov. 18, with screenings at the Trylon, the Bryant-Lake Bowl and opening night at the Uptown VFW. It includes 23 indie films (nearly 40, if you count all the shorts and extras) on music and musicians, labels and the arts. Most are Minnesota or Midwest premieres. Here’s a selection that jumped out at us.

“Sonic Youth: 30 Years of ‘Daydream Nation.’ ” For the 30th anniversary of the album’s release, filmmaker Lance Bangs and Babes in Toyland’s Lori Barbero will present “Daydream Nation”-related films and excerpts from Bangs’ new concert film of the band performing the album live in Glasgow in 2007. (If you’re planning to see the Walker’s “Thurston Moore: Moore at 60” on Nov. 9-10, this would be a great follow-up.)

“Mr. SOUL!” From 1968-73 – before Oprah, before Arsenio, on the heels of the Civil Rights movement – producer Ellis Haizlip hosted a groundbreaking PBS variety show devoted to the African American experience. “SOUL!” is now considered one of the most culturally significant TV shows in U.S. history. Director Melissa Haizlip will be in attendance.

[cms_ad:x100]“Industrial Accident: The Story of Wax Trax! Records.” Founded in Denver in 1975, relocated to Chicago in 1978, Wax Trax! was a hugely influential retail store and label that focused on international New Wave, punk rock, jazz and experimental music. The first screening has already sold out.

“Blue Note Records: Beyond the Notes.” In archival performance clips, interviews, and photos, director Sophie Huber tells the story of one of the most important record labels in the history of jazz, from its founding in New York in 1939 by German-Jewish refugees Alfred Lion and Frances Wolff to its remarkable renaissance under Don Was.

“Shake Sister Shake: Women in Blues.” A new look at an old genre – the blues – still dominated by men, Lisa Eismen’s film features the best female blues artists from California to New York. Narrated by Bruce Iglauer (Alligator Records), Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks, it explores their struggles, relationships, sisterhood and music.

“Mapplethorpe.” Made with the support of the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, featuring his original art, this is the first-ever biopic of the controversial artist. With Matt Smith (“Doctor Who,” “The Crown”) in the title role, it traces his life from the start of his friendship with Patti Smith to his final struggle with AIDS. Director Ondi Timoner had full access to archival material and early works.

“Milford Graves Full Mantis.” The first-ever feature-length portrait of percussionist Graves, a founding pioneer of avant-garde jazz who remains one of the most influential living figures in the evolution of the form. Directed by Jake Meginsky and Neil Young (not that Neil Young), this film takes you inside Graves’ life and heart.

“Teddy Pendergrass: If You Don’t Know Me.” Olivia Lichtenstein’s film tracks the R&B legend’s career from his breakout with Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes through his meteoric chart success, the tragic accident that left him paralyzed and his perseverance. Lichtenstein will be in attendance.

The opening night party on Nov. 14 will be at the Uptown VFW, with DJ Jake Rudh hosting “Transmission.” Panels and live music events are being finalized. More than 20 visiting filmmakers will be at the festival. FMI including the complete schedule, tickets and trailers.

The picks

Tonight (Thursday, Oct. 25) at the U’s Andersen Library: Exhibit reception for “Such a Big Dream: Edward S. Curtis at 150.” Seattle-based photographer Edward S. Curtis, a white man, spent 30 years photographing Native Americans. Between 1907 and 1930, he published more than 2,000 of his sepia-toned photographs in a series of 20 volumes titled “The North American Indian.” Co-curated by Curtis expert Christopher Cardozo, this exhibit looks at Curtis’ work, his life and the impact he had on photography. Today Curtis’ photographs are considered controversial. To learn more about that, you can read this, for starters. 5:30-8:30 p.m. FMI and reservations. Free. Ends Jan. 18.

Brian Freeman
Courtesy of Club Book
Brian Freeman
Tonight at Carver County Library in Chanhassen: Club Book: Brian Freeman. Best-selling novelist Freeman has made Duluth famous around the world, at least for readers. His hugely popular Jonathan Stride detective series is set there – and his books have been printed in 22 languages and sold in 46 countries. Freeman also pens the Cab Bolton series, about a Florida investigator. But this time he’s out with the latest Jonathan Stride, a page-turner called “Alter Ego.” 6:30 p.m. FMI. Free.

Tonight through Saturday at the Great Hall in Lowertown: Artability Art Show & Sale. Presented each year by People Incorporated, this sale celebrates the creativity of people with mental illnesses and their contributions to our community. Nearly 160 artists from the Twin Cities and greater Minnesota will offer more than 550 works of high-quality art for sale. Artists take home 80 percent of the show proceeds; the remaining 20 percent support People Incorporated’s year-round Artability workshops, which are open at no cost to any adult over 18 with a mental health diagnosis. 180 5th St. East in St. Paul. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday. FMI. Free.

[cms_ad:x101]Sunday in the Ordway Concert Hall: The Sphinx Virtuoso. Performing music by Shostakovich – and by Syrian American composer Kareem Roustom, Uruguayan American composer Miguel del Aguila, and multiple Grammy-winning jazz trumpeter and composer Terence Blanchard – the musicians of this acclaimed chamber ensemble walk the walk and play the tunes of diversity in classical music. All are alumni of the internationally renowned Sphinx Competition for black and Latino classical soloists. See the concert, then stick around for a post-show mingle with members of the orchestra. FMI and tickets ($10-20; students free).

Sunday at the Cathedral of St. Paul: VocalEssence Chorus & Ensemble Singers and the St. Olaf Choir: “Music for a Grand Cathedral.” Glorious voices and music in a glorious space. One of many special performances in VocalEssence’s 50th anniversary year, this concert will feature a full rendering of Ralph Vaughan Williams’ “Mass in G minor,” written when the composer turned 50. There’s a nice bit of synchronicity. 2 p.m. FMI and tickets ($10-40).

Joep Beving
Photo by Rahi Rezvani
Joep Beving’s touring behind “Conatus” and will likely bring a combination of solo piano and new sounds to the Cedar.
Monday at the Cedar: Joep Beving. We were intrigued by the story: tall Dutch ad man makes solo piano album that goes viral on Spotify and is heard by a Deutsche Grammophon record executive in a Berlin bar. Then we listened to the music and found it beautiful. Minimalist and layered, with delicate melodies that settle into grooves, it’s “simple music for complex emotions,” as Beving describes it. Soothing but not smoothing. For his third album, “Conatus” (his second on DG), Beving invited friends including synth pioneer Suzanne Ciani and Cello Octet Amsterdam to rework pieces from his first two albums. He’s touring behind “Conatus” now and will likely bring a combination of solo piano and new sounds to the Cedar. Minneapolis band Iceblink will open. If you’re wondering “How tall is he?” the answer is 6’10”. Doors at 7 p.m., show at 7:30. FMI and tickets ($22 advance, $25 day of show).

They didn’t vote … and now they can’t

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This story was originally published by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting, a nonprofit news organization based in the San Francisco Bay Area.  It was reported in collaboration with WABE in Atlanta and KCUR in Kansas City.

Even by Georgia standards, the voter purge of late July 2017 was remarkable. In a single day, more than half a million people — 8 percent of Georgia’s registered voters — were cut from the voter rolls. Republican Secretary of State Brian Kemp, an avid supporter of President Donald Trump who has described himself as a “politically incorrect conservative,” oversaw the removals eight months after he’d declared himself a candidate for governor.

The purge was noteworthy for another reason: For an estimated 107,000 of those people, their removal from the voter rolls was triggered not because they moved or died or went to prison, but rather because they had decided not to vote in prior elections, according to an APM Reports analysis. Many of those previously registered voters may not even realize they’ve been dropped from the rolls. If they show up at the polls on Nov. 6 to vote in the heated Georgia governor’s race, they won’t be allowed to cast a ballot.

Kemp’s opponent, Democrat Stacey Abrams, is vying to become the first African-American woman in U.S. history to serve as a governor. The state has undergone a dramatic influx of African Americans and Latinos whose votes could challenge Republican dominance, and her campaign is trying to turn out people of color, who are more likely to be infrequent voters. If the race is close, the July 2017 purge could affect the outcome.

[cms_ad:x100]The APM Reports analysis is the first estimate of the so-called “use it or lose it” policy’s possible impact in Georgia. While 107,000 people may seem like a small number in a state with a population of 10.4 million, elections have been decided by far smaller margins. For instance, the 2016 presidential election was decided in favor of Donald Trump by a total of 77,744 votes in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

Using someone’s decision not to vote as the trigger to remove that person from the rolls is a highly controversial — yet legal — tactic that voting rights advocates say is a potential tool for voter suppression. And its use is on the rise.

APM Reports found that at least nine states — most of them with Republican leadership, including the key battlegrounds of Georgia and Ohio — have purged an estimated hundreds of thousands of people from the rolls for infrequent voting since the 2014 general election. States with these policies are removing voters at some of the highest rates in the nation, no matter the reason.

Voter purges are not necessarily controversial or unusual. Hundreds of thousands of Americans who have moved, died, or gone to prison get kicked off voter lists across the country every year. In fact, federal law requires states to cull people from rolls who are no longer eligible to vote. But in the states that employ “use it or lose it” policies, U.S. citizens in good standing who haven’t moved, committed a crime or otherwise jeopardized their right to vote, can trigger the removal process because they didn’t show up at the polls.

Election officials say that they’re trying to keep voter registration lists accurate and prevent voter fraud. They consider it safe to assume that people who don’t vote in multiple elections, or return confirmation notices, have moved.

“We’re following the process,” Kemp said in a recent interview with public radio station WABE in Atlanta, arguing his office had not only complied with state and federal law but was registering more voters than ever. “I’m very proud of my record on making sure we have secure, accessible and fair elections.”

But voting rights advocates fear that “use it or lose it” purges could be used as a voter suppression tactic — along with voter ID requirements, gerrymandering, polling place changes or closures, and registration obstacles — that often help conservative candidates, because infrequent voters tend to be younger, poorer and people of color who are more likely to favor Democrats. For instance, the APM Reports investigation found that such purges in Ohio disproportionately affected urban, Democratic-leaning counties.

Advocates predict that more states could soon adopt similar policies following a controversial 5-4 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in June that “use it or lose it” policies don’t violate federal law.

Justin Levitt, a former Justice Department lawyer in the Obama administration turned professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, said a problem with the policy is that infrequent voting doesn’t necessarily prove that a person isn’t eligible. “So, I sat out a couple elections. I didn’t respond to a postcard and sat out a couple of elections,” he said. “It doesn’t say I’ve moved. It doesn’t say I’ve died. It doesn’t say in any way that I’ve given up my right.”

A state with a troubled past

One of the first people to wonder about the recent impact of “use it or lose it” policies in Georgia was an Atlanta-based attorney named Emmet Bondurant. It was 2012, and he was reading an article in the Atlanta Journal Constitution about a decline in the state’s voter registration. How, he wondered, could a state growing as fast as Georgia have shrinking rolls?

“We haven’t had a black plague. We haven’t had more than the usual number of people convicted of crimes. We haven’t had a major recession like the Dust Bowl that drove the Okies to California,” Bondurant said on a recent afternoon from the corner office of his corporate law firm, which, on a clear day, offers a view of the distant Appalachian Mountains. “The population in the state has increased and grown above the national average,” he recalled thinking. “And yet the number of registered voters [was] going down.”

Bondurant, 81, is a successful corporate attorney and somewhat of a voting rights legend in Georgia. He got his first big break in 1963 when, at 26, he argued and won a case before the Supreme Court that challenged the undue political influence of sparsely populated, rural areas at the expense of larger more urban ones. It was a significant victory for African-American voting rights in the state; by granting rural areas more influence, the state had prolonged white control. The next year, he was part of a legal team that scored another victory in the high court over similar voter suppression in Georgia. The cases were part of a string of victories for voting rights advocates, culminating in passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 that outlawed barriers to voting implemented by the Jim Crow South, including literacy tests in Georgia. Bondurant has continued to do pro-bono voting and other civil-rights cases in the six decades since.

[cms_ad:x101]As Bondurant saw the voter rolls shrinking, it dawned on him that the “use it or lose it” policy could be depressing registration numbers. And he wanted to do something about it.

Georgia adopted the “use it or lose it” law in the early 1990s — under Democratic leadership — following the adoption of the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA), which was passed in the first year of the Clinton administration to boost voter registration and participation. It’s often called the “Motor Voter” law because, among many other provisions, it allowed states to register people at the department of motor vehicles. The NVRA also laid out a process for states to ensure that voter lists are accurate by purging voters who’d moved, died or gone to prison.

At the time, the Justice Department initially objected to Georgia’s “use it or lose it” law. In 1994, Deval Patrick, then-assistant attorney general of the Justice Department’s civil rights section who would later be elected governor of Massachusetts as a Democrat, warned Georgia officials in a letter that the new law was “directly contrary to the language and purpose of the NVRA, and is likely to have a disproportionate adverse effect on minority voters in the state.”

Georgia’s “use it or lose it” law remained in place. In years to come, a growing number of Georgians would find themselves purged from the voter rolls because of it. This rise in purges had alarmed Bondurant, and the increase had coincided with the tenure of Georgia’s new secretary of state — Brian Kemp.

Kemp’s purges

Kemp, a former state senator, took over as Georgia’s top election official in January 2010 when then-Gov. Sonny Perdue appointed him to an unexpired term. He’s since won reelection twice. Kemp took office at a time when voter purges across the country began to grow. An APM Reports analysis of federal data shows that voter removals nationwide increased 11 percent between 2010 and 2016, by more than 1.6 million.

The 2008 election marked a turning point not just because Americans elected the first-ever African-American president, but also because Barack Obama performed exceptionally well in states that Republicans had dominated for at least the previous decade.

Thanks in part to a huge turnout by African-Americans, Obama won Virginia, North Carolina, and Indiana and got within 5 percentage points in Georgia (George W. Bush had won the state by 17 points in 2004).

In Georgia, active voter registration grew by 18 percent in 2008 compared with 2006. An additional 362,000 African Americans were added to the voter rolls that cycle, a 30 percent increase. There was also a 69 percent surge in Latino registrations and a 44 percent increase in the number of Asians added to the voter rolls between 2006 and 2008. But after Obama was elected, participation lagged, and not just in Georgia. More than 100 million Americans of voting age didn’t cast ballots in 2016.

At the same time, voter list removals across the country began to rise, especially in some battleground states where Obama had performed well in 2008, according to an APM Reports analysis.

But few states have increased voter purges more than Georgia. In the 2010 election cycle, when Kemp first took office, nearly 379,000 people were removed in counties across the state, according to data the state reported to the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. By 2014, the number of voters canceled increased by more than 35 percent, to 517,000, according to state data. In all, counties across Georgia reported removing more than 1.6 million from the rolls in the past decade. Some of these registrations (11 percent in 2017) were canceled because the voter died or was convicted of a felony.

In Georgia, a registered voter can be flagged for a purge if he or she doesn’t vote or make contact with election officials for three years. Election officials then send a notice in the mail to inform the person that he or she may be purged. If the person doesn’t respond, contact election officials or vote in two subsequent elections, then he or she will be removed. It’s a seven-year process. So people who voted in the high-turnout 2008 election but skipped 2010 through 2016 were dumped in 2017.

That may explain why the July 2017 purge was the biggest one yet under Kemp. More than 591,000 Georgians had their voter registrations canceled that year, according to the secretary of state’s office. State records show that 560,000 voter registrations were canceled for inactivity.

Not all were removed for not voting, however. The APM Reports investigation found that the state is broadly applying the term inactivity to remove voters. It includes people who have moved and who even voting rights advocates would agree should be purged from the lists. Georgia maintains no clear data on how many people have been purged under “use it or lose it.”

So APM Reports analyzed state voter records to determine roughly how many people were purged because they moved and how many were purged because they hadn’t voted. By using estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey of how many Georgians moved, APM Reports calculated that about 107,000 people — or about 18 percent of all voters removed — were purged in 2017 for reasons that the data suggested couldn’t be attributed to moving.

The finding is the first public estimate of how many people in Georgia — which, along with Ohio, is one of the most prolific “use it or lose it” states — were purged for failure to vote and respond to a notice.

Kemp, who, like many conservatives, prefers to call the process “voter list maintenance,” defended his office’s use of “use it or lose it” as an effective way of protecting elections from voter fraud. “So you think we should just leave people alone in perpetuity? I mean, what happens if they move to another state? People all the time move to another state, and they don’t tell us and end up getting on the voter rolls in two different states. We’ve had the same person voting twice in two different states in presidential elections. So there’s a reason you keep the voter rolls current and up to date,” Kemp said. “We don’t have near the problems other states have with with voter fraud, I believe, but we do have it.”

Georgia officials have pursued 19 election fraud cases in the past two decades; seven of those cases resulted in a criminal conviction, according to the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. Kemp’s critics argue that there’s little evidence that voter fraud is a serious threat to elections and that the true aim is to make it more difficult for minority voters to cast a ballot.

There’s indication that purges have disproportionately affected minority voters in some places. Analyzing all the Georgians purged in 2017, APM Reports found that in six of every 10 counties across Georgia, black voters were canceled at a higher rate than their white peers for inactivity. And in more than a quarter of those counties black voters were removed at a rate 1.25 times their white peers.

Purges are just one area in which critics allege that Kemp has tried to suppress the vote, and they’ve repeatedly sued his office for a range of infractions. The latest lawsuit was filed just last week by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the state chapter of the NAACP and other civic groups alleging that Kemp’s office has slow-walked 53,000 new voter registration applications, a majority submitted by people of color, because of an exact-match policy that was struck down by the courts only to be reinstated by state lawmakers. People on the list can still vote if they show up at a polling place with their photo ID, but the civil rights groups worry they’ll be confused and discouraged.

In fact, more federal voting rights lawsuits have been filed against officials in Georgia than any other state except Texas since 2011, an APM review of court records found. Multiple suits have accused Kemp of wrongly purging voters and creating obstacles to registration efforts.

Of the most common voter suppression tactics studied this year by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, a federal agency — voter ID laws, proof of citizenship requirements, purges, cuts in early voting, and polling places closures — Georgia is the only state once under federal oversight to have adopted all five.

“Racial discrimination in voting has been a particularly pernicious and enduring American problem,” the commission wrote in its recently released report. The commission concluded that voter purges, combined with other policies, present ongoing barriers to equal access for voters and “have a disparate impact on voters of color and poor citizens.”

By 2016, Bondurant had had enough and decided to file a lawsuit with Common Cause Georgia, a nonprofit watchdog group, and the state chapter of the NAACP, challenging the legality of “use it or lose it.”

In the lawsuit in federal court, he argued that using failure to vote as the trigger for purging people from the rolls violated federal law. Meanwhile Kemp’s office counters that people have been notified and would remain active if they would take the time to respond to the notice sent out by election officials. Bondurant suspects that most people treat the pre-purge notices as “junk mail” and throw them away.

“It’s a First Amendment issue,” Bondurant said. “You have a right to speak out on something, but you also have a right not to speak out on something. And voting can be thought of in the same way.”

Is it legal?

Around the same time that Bondurant filed his suit, voting rights advocates in Ohio were engaged in a similar fight.

In 2016, Larry Harmon, a 59-year-old U.S. Navy veteran, joined a lawsuit against Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted after being purged for infrequent voting. “You know, I pay my taxes every year, and I pay my property taxes, and I register my car. So the state had to know I’m still a voter,” Harmon told PBS’s “NewsHour.” “I’m a veteran, my father’s a veteran, my grandfather’s a veteran. Now they aren’t giving me my right to vote, the most fundamental right I have? I just can’t believe it.”

Harmon was born and raised in Ohio and had lived at the same address for approximately 15 years. When he tried to vote in the November 2015 general election, he was told that his name did not appear in the poll book. Harmon hadn’t voted in either 2009 or 2010 and was “disillusioned with the presidential candidates” in 2012 so he sat that one out too.

Under Ohio’s version of “use it or lose it” a registered voter can be removed after six years of inactivity, and in 2015, Harmon was removed from the Portage County voter registration rolls because he had not voted since 2008, court records show.

Husted, who is also running for lieutenant governor this year, defended the practice, arguing that his office was simply following the law and maintaining accurate voter rolls.

At issue in the court battle was the interpretation of the NVRA, which has been politically contentious since its inception. The initial bill, which set out to make voter registration more accessible through state offices and public outreach efforts, was blocked in the Senate by Republicans who feared expanding registration would lead to voter fraud. Among the vocal opponents was now-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who scoffed at helping “political couch potatoes.”

The bill was reintroduced in 1993 and signed into law by newly elected President Bill Clinton. While the law requires states to keep their voter lists up-to-date, it explicitly outlaws purging people for not voting.

But lawyers for Husted and Ohio officials contended that their “use it or lose it” approach is legal because it doesn’t purge people solely for not voting. Registered voters must skip elections and fail to respond to a notice and not make contact with elections officials in any other way.

The Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals rejected that argument and struck down the Ohio “use it or lose it” policy in September 2016. In their ruling, the Sixth Circuit judges, which included one appointed by George W. Bush, wrote that even though not voting was just one part of the purge process, under Ohio’s “use it or lose it” approach, it was the key factor.

Ohio officials appealed to the Supreme Court. The case became the latest flash point in the ongoing partisan fight over voter suppression and voter fraud. Georgia and 16 other states — all of them controlled by Republicans or with Republican attorneys general — filed briefs supporting the Ohio policy, as did conservative legal groups such as Judicial Watch and the American Civil Rights Union.

On the other side, 12 states and the District of Columbia — all Democratically controlled or with Democratic attorneys general — along with left-leaning groups such as Common Cause and the ACLU filed briefs opposing Ohio’s “use it or lose it” policy.

Bondurant, the Atlanta lawyer, was watching the Husted case closely. The lawsuit he’d filed in Georgia was on hold pending a decision by the high court. The partisan divide in the Ohio case, he said, only confirmed what he’d suspected all along. “Everybody on both sides of the political aisle sees that this benefits Republican voters.”

In their amicus brief to the Supreme Court, the dozen Democratic states argued that using failure to vote as a trigger for purges was a terribly inaccurate way to maintain the rolls because it doesn’t offer any evidence that people have actually moved. Only about 12 percent of Americans relocate in any given year, the Democratic AGs wrote in their brief, but the percentage of Americans who don’t vote has run as high as 60 percent in recent years. But the Supreme Court ultimately ruled that Ohio’s approach comported with federal law. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito wrote that “use it or lose it” may or may not be good policy but it didn’t violate federal law.

The ruling scuttled Bondurant’s case as well and ensured that “use it or lose it” would be in place in Georgia for the foreseeable future. Bondurant thinks that the case could get new life if there’s evidence that people of color are disproportionately affected by the purges in violation of the Voting Rights Act. “But until that research is done,” he said, “we’re stuck with secretaries of state like Kemp who, with great enthusiasm and vengeance, want to purge as many people as possible.”

The exact number of people removed under Ohio’s “use it or lose it” law was never revealed through the lawsuit. In a dissenting opinion, Justice Stephen Breyer took a stab at the math and raised questions about why Ohio’s removal rates were so high when people didn’t seem to be leaving the state in droves. “[T]he streets of Ohio’s cities are not filled with moving vans; nor has Cleveland become the Nation’s residential moving companies’ headquarters,” he wrote.

By comparing Ohio purge data with U.S. Census data, as we did with Georgia, APM Reports calculated an estimate of people whose removal was triggered by not voting. According to this analysis, 50,610 registered voters in Ohio could have been removed by the end of the 2016 general election under the “use it or lose it” policy.

In Ohio, voters were purged most in Democratic-leaning counties, which are larger and more urban. Of the five counties with the highest overall removal rates, four went for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election, an APM Reports analysis of data provided by the Ohio secretary of state’s office shows.

Clinton won just eight of the state’s 88 counties. In four of them — Cuyahoga, Athens, Franklin and Hamilton — more than a million people were removed overall from the voter list between November 2014 and February of 2018, state records show. Voters in those four counties accounted for 43 percent of all removals statewide despite making up just 30 percent of the state’s registered voters in 2016. Trump won the state by nearly 447,000 votes.

After the high court’s ruling, Husted told reporters that he hopes Ohio will “serve as a model for other states to use.” And voting rights advocates fear that more red states will heed his advice.

In a small Georgia town, apathy and disillusionment

For the moment, the biggest impact from “use it or lose it” policies may be seen in Georgia, where the Kemp-Abrams race has drawn national media attention.

With Kemp and Abrams neck-and-neck in polls, the election will likely be decided by who turns out to vote. While Kemp has a record of shedding voters, Abrams is open about her strategy: register as many people of color as possible, and inspire them to turn out in unprecedented numbers. The two have clashed repeatedly over those registration efforts. The nonprofit New Georgia Project, launched by Abrams to get more voters involved, became the subject of one of the voter fraud investigations that Kemp’s office has launched in recent years. No evidence of election fraud has been substantiated to date.

In short, Abrams is trying to replicate what happened around the country in 2008 when Obama was running for president. “There’s a pathway for Stacey Abrams to win,” said Republican strategist Brian Robinson, who’s done work for congressmen in Georgia and the state’s current governor, and advised one of Kemp’s primary opponents. “Republicans who think that there is not are delusional and they are a danger because it will lead to complacency.”

Democrats are fighting complacency too, especially in the more remote corners of the state. In rural Colquitt County, people like Isabella Brooks, the president of the Colquitt chapter of the NAACP, is trying to motivate voters to turn out for Abrams. It hasn’t been easy.

Colquitt is a rural area in southwest Georgia, about 45 minutes from the Florida state line, where most people live clustered in a handful of towns divided by large swaths of cotton fields and livestock farms that have supported the local economy for more than two centuries. It has low voter turnout, especially among African-Americans, and perhaps relatedly, one of the highest purge rates in the state.

On a recent evening as dusk set in, Brooks, her sister and some friends packed into her Ford Fusion to do voter outreach in Moultrie, the county seat. They drove along potholed streets, past ramshackle homes on the black side of town, before crossing into the whiter area where the homes are freshly painted and the lawns are lush and wide.

As a child, Brooks recalled, her mother was subjected to a literacy test at a local polling place. “She had to read a long passage,” she said, stretching her hands inches apart. “Then she could vote.” It’s a reminder of how voting shouldn’t be taken for granted.

In the white part of town, the Kemp yard signs outnumber the ones for Abrams. But there are a few Democrats to be found. The canvassers, all elderly black women, knocked on doors of registered voters provided by the Democratic Party. They crunched through fallen leaves, leaving fliers on doorsteps. Around 8 p.m., with the sun setting, they tried one last house, where they could see someone inside watching “Jeopardy!” Nobody came to the door, and a canvasser turned around and walked back toward the road, frustrated. It’s a running joke here that most of the local white Democrats are in the closet these days, particularly after Obama was elected.

Levitt, the former Justice Department attorney, says that low voter turnout isn’t good for either party — or the country. And having motivated voters turned away at the polls could only dampen enthusiasm, activists fear. A low turnout could also trigger hundreds of new purges in Colquitt alone next year; about a third of inactive voters in the county are queued up for cancellation before the next presidential election because they haven’t voted in years, according to state data.

If “use it or lose it” states like Georgia adopted same-day registration, experts say, motivated, eligible voters who were purged would have a protection built in so they could still cast ballots. Only one of the nine “use it or lose it” states currently has same-day registration. Bills to add it in Georgia have been introduced a dozen times since 2011, but they all failed to pass the Republican-controlled state House. The uncertainty of Election Day registration — and the possibility of a wave turnout — makes some Republican lawmakers uneasy, because, as Robinson put it: “Weird things happen where states elect some oddball. It leads to irrational voting.”

But same-day registration would help people like Kathlean Ponder, a 66-year-old African-American resident of Colquitt County who was removed from the rolls in the 2017 purge. In 2008, she registered as part of the Obama wave. “I was feeling good about it,” she said. “I had in my mind to vote for him, and that’s what I did.”

She hasn’t cast a ballot or connected with election officials since. She doesn’t recall ever getting a notice that her registration was being canceled. She isn’t a regular voter, but she’s thinking about turning out in November to support Abrams.

Her nephew is Cornelius Ponder III, a pastor and Moultrie city councilman. He said that too many people in his now majority African American hometown have grown so disillusioned with government that they’ve given up on voting, people like his aunt. He fears that any additional obstacles will only reinforce that the system is designed to discourage their vote. “A lot of our race is basically wondering is it really worth it,” he said. “I don’t believe that this generation believes that their votes really matter.”

Ponder has been sharing his congregation’s community center with Brooks and the other canvassers trying to engage with voters, but people like his own aunt have been overlooked by canvassers because they are no longer on the list of active voters. Even Ponder didn’t know that his own aunt had been purged from the voter rolls.

“I think we need to get down to the bottom of it,” Ponder said of his aunt’s purge, “because if it happened to her, I promise you, she’s not the only one.”

Johnny Kauffman is a reporter with the public radio station WABE in Atlanta. Peggy Lowe with KCUR contributed reporting to this story. Support for this project was provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Get Reveal’s investigations emailed to you directly by signing up at revealnews.org/newsletter.

Minnesota has one of nation’s lowest childhood obesity rates, but it’s still high

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In Minnesota, 10.4 percent of young people aged 10 to 17 are obese, well below the national average of 15.8 percent, according to a report released Wednesday by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

In fact, only three states — Utah (8.7 percent), New Hampshire (9.8 percent) and Washington (10.1 percent) — have lower rates than ours.

Minnesota’s rate is still part of an “alarming trajectory” described in the report, however. Like the national figure, it’s almost triple what it was four decades ago.

“Childhood obesity continues to be major public health challenge, with significant financial and societal implications,” said Jamie Bussel, senior program officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, in a released statement. “Far too many young people in this country are facing increased chances of diabetes, heart disease, and high blood pressure, all due to a preventable condition.”

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Key findings

The foundation’s new report is based on combined 2016 and 2017 data from the National Survey of Children’s Health (NSCH), which includes information from a representative sampling of children living in more than 534,000 households in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

For the survey, parents provide their child’s height and weight, which were then used to calculate each child’s body mass index (BMI). The BMIs enabled researchers to determine how many children meet the definition of obese (a BMI at or above the 95th percentile for their age).

The analysis of that data — which focused on children aged 10 to 17 — revealed that there was an almost threefold difference between the highest and lowest state childhood obesity rates, from Utah’s low of 8.7 percent to Mississippi’s high of 26.1 percent.

Mississippi had the only rate that was significantly higher than the national rate of 15.8, however. And eight states, including Minnesota, had rates significantly lower than the national average.

The data also revealed other important disparities. Boys were much more likely to be obese (18 percent) than girls (13.4 percent).

Racial and ethnic disparities were also found. Black youth had the highest rate of obesity (22.5 percent), followed by Hispanic youth (20.6 percent), white youth (12.5 percent) and Asian youth (6.4 percent).

“We must help all children grow up at a health weight so they can lead healthy lives, and save the nation billions in health care costs,” said Bussel.

What lawmakers need to do

As the report points out, researchers predict that if current obesity trends continue, more than half of today’s children will be obese by the time they reach their 35th birthday.

[cms_ad:x101]To stop this “alarming trajectory,” the report’s authors provide a list of recommendations for lawmakers and other policymakers, including the following:

  • Strengthen healthy-food and nutritional programs for low-income families (and expand access to such programs).
  • Make sure all students receive at least 60 minutes of physical activity daily.
  • Restrict food and beverage companies — and restaurants — from marketing unhealthful foods to children.

In the current political environment, however, such recommendations are unlikely to take hold. Earlier this year, for example, Republicans in Congress and the Trump administration proposed cuts to nutrition programs aimed at low-income families, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) (also known as food stamps) and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). The White House has also weakened nutrition standards for school lunches and other meals.

FMI: You’ll find the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation report on the organization’s website.


Distinctive Grand Rapids-based Northern Community Radio explores the world through a local lens

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One day in August, on Northern Community Radio, an FM station based in Grand Rapids, Chuck Marohn and Aaron Brown were discussing the lasting appeal of President Donald Trump, who carried a large swath of Minnesota’s Arrowhead region in the 2016 presidential election.

Marohn, an engineer and city planner from Brainerd, and Brown, a college teacher and writer from rural Grand Rapids, were taking part in “Dig Deep,” a public affairs program that features the men engaging in lengthy discussions about politics and other topics related to the region. Marohn is billed as the conservative of the pair, Brown the liberal. Heidi Holtan, the station’s news and public affairs director, moderates.

Marohn kicked off the segment by pushing back against the notion that Trump is popular with working class voters because he appeals to their base instincts – their racism and xenophobia. That’s offensive, he said, the result of lazy thinking. More likely, Marohn argued, blue collar workers who are used to economic ups-and-downs – like the miners here on the Iron Range – looked at Trump, a flamboyant if flawed businessman, as a kind of fellow risk-taker.

“If we went to the mill or we went to the mines and we said, ‘Would you rather have a beer with George W. Bush, Mitt Romney or Donald Trump?’ I think even before Donald Trump runs for president they say Donald Trump,” he said. They would think, “This is a guy that I feel that I could relate to.”

[cms_ad:x100]Brown didn’t buy the risk-taker part of that argument. But he did see in Trump parallels to a famous Minnesota politician who also appealed to the common man: former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura, the third-party outlier who was elected 20 years ago after a career in professional wrestling.  

“He was a villain, as a wrestler, and those were the best wrestlers ‘cause they could do whatever and it was awesome and you could throw things at them and you could hit ‘em in the head with a beer bottle and they didn’t care!” Brown said. “You know, it was beautiful. And I think Trump kind of filled that role.” Many voters, he added, probably figured that Trump, like Ventura, could disrupt the body politic, thinking, “You know what, I don’t know what’s going on in Washington, but why don’t we send a professional wrestler in there and body slam some folks.”

MinnPost photo by Gregg Aamot
KAXE, Northern Community Radio’s headquarters, is located near downtown Grand Rapids, an Itasca County town of 10,000.
In an era of media instability, Northern Community Radio is banking on the kind of sensibility found in that exchange – smart, topical, chatty – to remain vibrant in this region of blue-collar workers, cabin dwellers and outdoors enthusiasts. By a few measures, the formula seems to be working; 42 years after it started, NCR has a $1 million budget, nearly twice the paid membership it had two decades ago, and an enviable geographic reach.

Julie Crabb, a longtime station volunteer who currently serves as president of its board of directors, explained the station’s approach this way: “We want people to understand northern Minnesota in sort of a global way, if you will.”

People, not gophers

Northern Community Radio, which went on the air in 1976, is an independent affiliate of National Public Radio – meaning that it broadcasts some of NPR’s popular programming, such as “Morning Edition” and “All Things Considered,” along with its own offerings.

NCR’s first station was KAXE in Grand Rapids, an Itasca County town of 10,000 people on the far southwestern edge of the Iron Range. NCR has expanded over the years, adding a station in Bemidji and relay towers in Brainerd and Ely; its broadcasts now stretch from the western edges of Duluth to near the North Dakota border. The station estimates that it has about 20,000 listeners at any given time, not to mention many others who tune in digitally from other states, or even other countries.

It had an inauspicious beginning. As the story goes, according to station founder Rich McClear, writing in an early annual report, a staffer at the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (the former federal agency that oversaw public radio) wasn’t impressed by plans for a station in this remote region because the agency wanted “to fund stations which serve people, not gophers.” The station outlasted that slur and weathered near-bankruptcy in 1984 after the broadcast tower in Grand Rapids crumpled when a truck snagged a guy wire.

These days, NCR has 11 full-time employees, two part-timers and some contract workers who are paid with funding from the Legacy Amendment, which created a state fund that supports arts and cultural pursuits across Minnesota. It also draws on a network of more than 100 volunteers who play music, read the news on the air and host various programs, including a weekly trivia show.

The volunteers have become an integral part of NCR’s mission, helping to give many of the broadcasts a particularly local feel.   

[cms_ad:x101]Besides serving on the board, Crabb, a retired postal worker who moved to the area from the Twin Cities suburbs 28 years ago, hosts the station’s trivia show, “Green Cheese,” along with two other volunteers. She said she looked at the work as a way to support a media outlet that reflects the local culture. “We want (listeners) to understand what it feels like to live in northern Minnesota,” she said.

Like public radio elsewhere, NCR also relies heavily on listener contributions for its survival. In fiscal year 2017, it raised about a fourth of its roughly $1 million operating budget from member drives and other promotions.  (The station received about $150,000 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting).

Montgomery, the general manager, said KAXE had fewer than 1,000 members in 1995, when she became the general manager; today, membership is around 1,800. Its budget has tripled over that span. The challenge, Montgomery said, is to maintain that contributor base in an era of media uncertainty fueled by smartphones and satellite radio. One approach: lowering the monthly membership fee to as little as $5 to attract younger listeners. “We kind of think we have a groovy, cool thing here and millennials are participating,” she said. “They have a future here.”

Early in the decade, the station began a drive to recruit “sustaining members” – those committed to making annual donations – and now has more than 600.

Curiously engaging

On Sept. 25, John Latimer opened “Phenology,” his weekly NCR segment about the natural environment, with the kind of earnest chatter that has made him a popular figure – a Fred Rogers of northern Minnesota, delivering ordinary updates about the natural environment in a curiously engaging way. (Phenology, according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, is a branch of science that deals with “relations between climate and periodic biological phenomena”).

The lead topic of the day: whether listeners should put their hummingbird feeders away for the year. Latimer had gotten some reports from students who follow his show and had shared their observations.

“I, personally, have not seen a hummingbird in probably two weeks now, but the students are still seeing a few,” he said. “I think the latest one in the north was over in Cherry (a village in St. Louis County) on, well, let’s see, the 18th at North Shore Community School. They had a hummingbird reported there, so keep your feeders out. Mine’s still out! I’m hoping everyday that one last migrant will stop for a nip and then head south.”

Grand Rapids, Minnesota
Grand Rapids, Minnesota
Latimer also talked about the reeds standing along lakes and roads, which were turning brown; red maple trees, whose leaves were just reaching their peak fall colors; and trembling aspen trees, whose leaves were showing flecks of yellow.  

“As I was driving along County Road 49 north of Grand Rapids,” he said, as if talking to a neighbor who knows all of the back roads, “I noticed that the entire tree group – all of the aspens along that road – were sort of lime green. There’s a bunch of yellow that’s starting to mix in.”

Other shows include “Give & Take,” Holtan’s weekly interview with local newsmakers; and “What’s for Breakfast,” a Friday morning bit that involves listeners calling the studio, sharing what they ate for breakfast – and then digressing into whatever topic is on their minds.  

One morning in August, Joe Morrisey, an Ely resident who was on vacation in Mexico City, called in and reported that he was about to eat scrambled eggs and chiles over dried-out tortillas that he had fried in coconut oil. Holton and John Bauer, the station’s development director – who doubles as coach of the local community college women’s basketball team – were on the air.

As the discussion unfolded, Morrisey recalled how he had attended a language school in Mexico in the late 1970s, an experience that deepened his interest in the country. He hoped to retire there. The hosts listened and asked a few questions – then shifted gears, bringing the segment back to what they had been talking about before Morrissey called: hats.

Bauer asked: “Do you look good in a hat, Joe?”

Music mix unlike ‘anywhere else’

“On the River,” Northern Community Radio’s daily music program, provides listeners with an eclectic dose of folk, rock, blues, jazz and world beat. Music Director Kari Hedlund provides a format for the show, highlighting certain albums and new releases, but the volunteers who take the mic when she isn’t on the air choose their own playlists.

Hedlund, like Crabb, is a northern Minnesota transplant. She lived in Minneapolis before moving to the Grand Rapids area, happy to get away from the “constant rigmarole” of the Twin Cities and to reconnect with nature. For a time, she worked as a caretaker at a resort, then on an organic farm. “I thought, moving up here, that everyone was going to be local, that everyone would probably be a native of the area,” she said.  “It was surprising how many are not and have similar stories as mine and were living in the Cities.”

That revelation – of people being from other places, interested in a diversity of experience – has reinforced the station’s choice in music. We like to think that we offer a mix of music that you don’t get anywhere else,” she said. “A lot of places people can’t get exposed to that kind of music. So, it’s sort of our job, our position, to introduce listeners to music that they wouldn’t normally listen to.”

A recent afternoon playlist included “The Mad Hatter Rides again,” by Jeff Coffin and the Mu’tet; “Rollin’ and Tumblin’,” by Bob Dylan, and “Free,” by Joan Armatrading.  

The station strives for gender balance in its music, splitting its airtime 50-50 between male and female artists. (The breakdown in the commercial radio world, Hedlund said, is more like 70 percent male and 30 percent female). DJs are also encouraged to play one song from a Minnesota artist each hour. Listeners will hear such Minnesota acts as Jeremy Messersmith, The Cactus Blossoms and the Christopher David Hanson Band.  Centerstage Minnesota is a Friday segment that features Minnesota artists exclusively.

The station is also in its third year of co-sponsoring concerts in a 200-seat theater at the Reif Performing Arts Center, a complex at the local high school. “One of the best ways to measure who we are reaching is by who shows up to the concerts,” Hedlund said.

A very different place’

Northern Community Radio is headquartered at the KAXE studio, a low-slung building with a brick exterior tucked along the Mississippi River just off of downtown Grand Rapids. A large tower hovers over the station and a small outdoor amphitheater.

NCR doesn’t follow the familiar format of rural radio, with its market summaries, high school sports broadcasts and local news reports. As a public station, however, it must fulfill an educational role, which it does through interviews with local movers and shakers (on “Give & Take”), commentary on the issues of the day (on “Dig Deep”); and reports from other media (like occasional discussions with Marshall Helmberger, the publisher of the Timberjay, a newspaper in St. Louis County).  

Earlier this month, Holtan interviewed memoirist Sarah Smarsh about her recently published book, “Heartland:  A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke in the Richest Country on Earth,” a meditation on her experience growing up in Kansas.

As the interview began, Holtan, a northern Minnesota native who grew up in Brainerd, shared a pet peeve of hers: media characterizations of people who live in rural areas as poor or blindly conservative or somehow lesser. “As you can tell, I get a little PO’d about the definition of rural people from other areas,” Holtan said.

Smarsh agreed, referring to the “blind spots” that reporters – particularly those in the New York newsrooms where she has worked – can have about class and place. As if speaking to those journalists, she said: “The framework you are using for describing an immense swath of the nation is reductive and stereotypical and dwells in caricature.” She hoped her book would push against those “simplistic stories.”

Holtan added: “It’s a very different place than what people have been defining us as.”  

A few weeks earlier, Holtan had welcomed me to the station on a late afternoon near the end of a workday. The building was quiet. We sat in the studio, a small room with a picture window that looks out over the famous river, discussing the station’s programs. “Dig Deep” was generating some positive feedback, she said. People liked its depth and – in this era of heated politics – its civil tone. “I have heard from a lot of people who appreciate that,” she said.

Years on the job have given Holtan an ear for the kinds of interactions that can make for interesting segments or add perspective to the issues of the day. She doesn’t have to go far to discover them. “We want to find local people and let them talk,” she said. “You know, there’s a power in hearing from people and letting them tell their stories.”


This report was made possible by a grant from the Otto Bremer Trust. MinnPost’s donors, foundation funders, and corporate sponsors support our work in the belief that promoting greater civic engagement and informed discourse is the surest path to a better Minnesota. They play no role in guiding the journalism produced by MinnPost.

As Trump disparages immigrants, Midwest dairy farmers build bridges to Mexico

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Roberto Tecpile often puts in 70 hours a week at the Rosenholm dairy farm in Cochrane, Wisconsin — a place where winter days are short and can be bitterly cold. It is a job that farmers say most Americans refuse to do.

Tecpile, a native of Astacinga, in the Mexican state of Veracruz, has spent nearly 20 years in the United States, the past four working for farmer John Rosenow. According to his boss, Tecpile is the “go-to guy” for fixing farm equipment — whether it be a lawnmower or a gauge. Tecpile said the job is going well, and right now it is the most important thing as he prepares to return home in a year or two.

Tecpile is saving money to build a kitchen for his wife, Veronica, “with cabinets and everything.” She currently cooks outside in their mountain village for their two sons, Kevin, 15, and Aaron, 9, and their daughter, Megan, 4.“I want to work a little bit more. … I want to buy a kitchen for my wife, and for the kids, I want them to have something better,” the 39-year-old dairy worker said. “At times we say being able to be together would be much better, but at the same time, we still don’t have everything arranged.”

Tecpile himself comes from a family of nine children, and it is difficult for him to be away from all of his family. But Rosenow makes sure they know Tecpile is being cared for and that he is working hard.

Rosenow has visited Tecpile’s family twice in Astacinga. Rosenow’s farm is one of 60 to 70 in western Wisconsin and southeast Minnesota involved in Puentes/Bridges, a small nonprofit that organizes annual trips to Mexico to bridge the cultural gap between farmers and their employees — and the physical gap between the workers and their families.

Began in 1990s

The program began in the late 1990s when immigrant workers began to show up on Wisconsin dairy farms. Immigrants now make up an estimated 51 percent of all dairy workers in the United States. Many of these employees are undocumented, making trips back and forth across the border dangerous.

Puentes/Bridges founder Shaun Duvall said she wanted to strengthen language skills and cultural competency so farmers could work better with their new employees.

She recalled that the program started as a challenge from a local University of Wisconsin-Extension agent who suggested, “There’s a lot of farmers in Buffalo County that are hiring Mexican employees. Don’t you want to teach these dairy farmers some Spanish?”

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Today the program’s overarching goal is relationship building. Rosenow, who is on the Puentes/Bridges board of directors, said the program has helped him gain insight into the lives of his employees, who risk detention — or even worse — in their quest for a better life.

“I understand a little bit of their motivation to put themselves in danger to come here and to work in a different climate and to make money,” he said.

The effort runs counter to the anti-immigrant sentiment fueled by President Donald Trump, whose negative rhetoric and aggressive policies have included family separations at the border and a sharp uptick in arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Minnesota’s buffer law is likely to change — no matter who wins the governor’s race

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Gov. Mark Dayton’s signature clean water law requiring buffers along Minnesota waterways is in many ways well established. It first went into effect in November of 2017, and state officials say compliance is high — more than 95 percent on all bodies of water in Minnesota.

But despite that level of participation, debate over the regulation is hardly settled. Opponents of the law, including some in the agriculture industry, say it forces farmers to give up productive land without anything in return, and they bristled at what they said was a lack of input in writing the regulation.

Supporters, including Dayton and environmental groups, contend the rule is necessary to prevent farm runoff from harming wildlife and contaminating drinking water, a costly and dangerous problem in many areas of the state. Research says buffers help filter out pollutants such as phosphorus and nitrogen from rivers, lakes and other sources of water.

[cms_ad:x100]But with Dayton leaving office, the buffer law has become one of the top natural resource issues in the governor’s race between Republican Jeff Johnson and DFLer Tim Walz, and both are likely to forge their own path on balancing clean water and agricultural production by changing the program — even if it’s not entirely clear what those changes will be.

“The buffer thing has become kind of the tip of the spear, you might say, how farmers feel so frustrated,” said state Rep. Dan Fabian, R-Roseau.

Repeal (and replace?)

Johnson, a Hennepin County Commissioner, has made his intentions simple: he wants to repeal Dayton’s buffer regulations completely.

In an interview Tuesday, Johnson said the buffer law has been faulty and inflexible and doesn’t compensate farmers for what they say is lost land. Johnson also criticized Dayton for not properly consulting producers for his original proposal, which has been a frequent gripe from some farmers and the GOP.

While Dayton has said he should have done better to convene agriculture interests ahead of the initial rollout of his proposal, the measure has been softened before and after it was passed by the Legislature in 2015. But that hasn’t been enough for Johnson.“I would start over with it,” he told MinnPost. “It’s clearly not working for many farmers.”

What comes next is less clear.

Johnson said he wants to address clean water in some fashion as governor. But he said he’s not sure whether he would secure a replacement deal before repealing the buffer law. He also gave scant details on what he’d propose as an alternative.

“I suspect we’d come to a solution relatively quickly but it probably would take a [legislative] session to do that,” he said. “And it might look similar, but I want to make sure that what we have in place — farmers have at least had the opportunity to be heard and to offer their suggestions about how best to protect water.”

That doesn’t necessarily mean buffers would be a thing of the past in a Johnson administration. He said they’re “obviously” a part of his vision for protecting water quality. But he said he also wants to ensure farmers will be paid for the land used for buffers. He likened requiring them to the government exercising eminent domain to obtain property.

That’s not a new concept in St. Paul. The Minnesota Corn Growers Association has been pushing for the Legislature to offer farmers $50-an-acre tax credits for land use. The proposal stalled in the 2018 session, however, because lawmakers and the governor couldn’t agree on a source for the money. The state Department of Revenue estimated in May the proposal would cost Minnesota roughly $27 million over the two-year budget cycle, starting in 2020.

[cms_ad:x101]But Johnson said he’d like to go further than the Corn Growers’ proposal, paying farmers directly for any land used for buffers. He said he did not have an estimate for how much that plan might cost, but said payments would vary depending on the value of property.

“Frankly, I think people should be justly compensated for the property and I think the Corn Growers put that out because — based upon the current governor — they realized they aren’t going to get compensated so they’re looking for at least something,” Johnson said.

Tweak and build

Walz rejected the idea of repealing the buffer law, but also said in an interview that he would build on 2017 legislative amendments that gave farmers more flexibility with buffers, depending on the unique features of their land and water.

The buffer law first passed in 2015, but its general requirement of 50-foot buffer strips along lakes, rivers and streams went into effect late last year despite urging from some Republicans to delay. Starting in November, 16.5-foot buffers along ditches will also be required under the law.

Walz said he’d be open to approving the tax rebate plan from the Corn Growers Association — if it met one condition: the money shouldn’t come from the Clean Water Fund as proposed by the corn group. That fund doles out dedicated sales tax cash from the 2008 Clean Water, Land and Legacy Amendment approved by voters.

Money in the Clean Water Fund must be spent to “protect, enhance, and restore water quality,” according to the state constitution and must “supplement” normal spending on those goals.

Walz said paying for the tax credit with Clean Water Fund money would be challenged for breaking those constitutional limitations. Dayton had essentially the same stance in the 2018 legislative session, and the bill did not pass. (Johnson said he thinks using the Clean Water Fund would be constitutional, but he’d prefer any money spent on tax rebates for farmers to come from the state’s general fund or another source of money.)

Walz also said he’s looking to the Congressional Farm Bill, which is still being debated in Washington D.C., to offer money to farmers for buffers through the Conservation Reserve Program and others as it has in the past.

“When I hear this discussion, ‘We should get rid of it,’ that’s not what my producers are saying,” Walz told MinnPost about Dayton’s buffer law. “It’s certainly not what Pheasants Forever, Ducks Unlimited and others are saying. So it’s about tweaking it. It’s about finding those sources. It’s about having the courage to go back and figure out where we can fund this.”

Political debate continues

While Walz supports the buffer law, he did not call for future regulation of agriculture in the aim of improving drinking water. Walz said he wants the state to work “as partners” with agriculture and that politics over regulations are “getting in the way” of finding middle ground.

He also said Minnesota should push research and technology to fix and prevent drinking water and habitat contamination. “In agriculture, our silver bullet has always been innovation in technology — that we continue to move forward,” Walz said. “I really believe that’s going to have to be the fix.”

It’s not clear if Walz’s strategy of smoothing out old fights by having “feet in a lot of camps,” as he put it, is working. Consensus has been hard to come by at the state Capitol, even within his own party.

Rep. Rick Hansen of South St. Paul, the DFL lead in the House’s environmental committee, said he sees the buffer law as a first step. While he said he supports incentives for farmers to entice practices that improve water quality, he said stricter rules for agriculture to prevent pollution and pay for clean up are necessary, too.

For one, Hansen said he’d like to put new fees on fertilizer to help pay for infrastructure projects that treat water. He also likened the buffer law to Minnesota’s ban on smoking in bars, saying businesses should not be paid to comply with what he sees as a necessary public health regulation. “In a perfect world I’d hope the small vocal minority of the ag industry would realize they’re flogging a dead horse and move onto other issues like trade, profitability and anti-consolidation of agriculture,” Hansen said of the buffer law.

That notion roiled Fabian, the Roseau Republican and chairman of the House environmental committee, who said he’s “willing to work with” Johnson on repealing the buffer law, despite some reservations that it could be accomplished.

Fabian acknowledged there are likely greater concerns for farmers’ pocketbooks than the buffer law. But he said farmers take water quality seriously and are dedicated to its improvement. The “top-down” nature of the initial regulation roll out — and the insistence from some DFLers to fall in line rather than keep working on the issue since — have left deep wounds in the agriculture community, Fabian said.

“The buffer thing is something that has just re-reared its ugly head,” Fabian said. “Simply because it’s kind of the symbolic crown jewel of the lack of respect and understanding for agriculture. So it goes much deeper than just the implementation of the buffer law.”

Wardlow criticized for taking campaign money from for-profit college owners sued for fraud

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Hey, for-profit education executives need representation too. The Pioneer Press’ Christopher Magan reports: “Republican candidate for attorney general Doug Wardlow took $24,000 from owners and executives of the for-profit college chain Globe University, which was successfully sued for fraud by the state. … Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party Chair Ken Martin highlighted donations from the Myhre family, which owns Globe University, and from Jeanne and Nathan Hermann, who worked for the family’s for-profit college chain, at a Wednesday news conference.”

Thao cleared. The Pioneer Press’ Frederick Melo reports: “When St. Paul City Council Member Dai Thao entered a voting booth last fall to help an elderly Hmong woman vote for him, he may indeed have violated a state law. But not a federal one. … Federal law makes clear that disabled or illiterate voters may pick almost any assistant of their choosing other than their union representative or employer. … In the criminal case filed against Thao, the federal Voters Rights Act of 1965 ‘preempts the Minnesota voter assistance law,’ said Ramsey County District Court Judge Nicole Starr in a seven-page legal order signed Tuesday.”

U.S. Bank layoffs. MPR’s Peter Cox reports: “U.S. Bank is laying off 700 employees, the Minneapolis bank announced today, saying the layoffs are due to changing business needs. … Affected employees are being notified this week.”

A new era. The Star Tribune’s La Velle E. Neal III reports:Rocco Baldelli will be the youngest manager in major league baseball when takes over the helm of the Twins next season. … The 37-year-old Tampa Bay Rays major league field coordinator will be introduced at a 3 p.m. news conference at Target Field on Thursday. He’s the first managerial hire for the Twins from outside the organization since 1985.”

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In other news…

Should this have been disqualifying?Apparently new Minnesota Twins manager Rocco Baldelli is SUPER into Phish” [City Pages]

Keeps those pesky weeds out of your cereal bowl:Herbicide found in Cheerios reignites debate on food safety” [Star Tribune]

Big changes on the banks of the St. Croix:Changes to Afton’s Old Village, housing project stir competition for mayor” [Pioneer Press]

We were wondering about these:‘Who wins matters’: billboards and signs, paid for by Pohlads, encourage Minnesotans to vote” [Star Tribune]

Probably no second date here:Man alleges Minnesota woman stole guns after online dating encounter” [West Central Tribune]

Where the pros drink:Industry Picks: Best Breweries and Beer in Minnesota” [Mpls.St.Paul]

This could be some hot merch: Minnesota Timberwolves to honor Prince with special uniforms inspired by ‘Purple Rain’” [The Current]

Farming as if nature still mattered: a new book offers encouraging examples

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image of book coverOver in Gibbon, Minnesota, Martin and Loretta Jaus decided to take 11 acres of their dairy farm and restore it as wildlife habitat: trees, perennial grasses, small ponds for the comfort of frogs and doves. Without compromising their ability to graze cows, or otherwise undermining the profitability of their organic milk operation, they’ve created homes for an astonishing 200-plus bird species, some rare.

They’ve also made the farm financially resilient with a wider effort to restore soil health, using carefully managed planting and grazing practices. In 1989, at the end of a four-year drought, grasshoppers wrecked soybean and small-grain crops all around them, but left the Jaus farm largely alone. Plant diversity had made their fields tougher forage than the neighbors’ one-crop plantings; also, it raised the sugar content of their grains, and therefore the alcohol potential, to a point of toxicity in the hoppers’  guts.

Down in northwest Iowa, Jan Libbey and Tim Landgraf raise organic vegetables on 132 acres, some of it knobby terrain undesirable to your typical corn and soybean grower, who prefers the contours of a billiard table. They also raise chickens, which are pastured on clover planted as soil-enhancing cover; in return, the birds provide free fertilizer (and a second income stream from area consumers who choose them over the supermarket alternative).

Selling vegetables on the subscription-based model of community-supported agriculture (CSA), and also through wholesalers, Libbey and Landraf have not only made a good living along the way, but have reached a point where they can cut back production and take life a little easier, with more time to enjoy wildlife in the natural areas and wetlands they’ve restored.

[cms_ad:x100]These farms are but two examples among many I visited this week via “Wildly Successful Farming: Sustainability and the New Agricultural Land Ethic,” an intriguing and even inspiring book by Brian DeVore of Minneapolis that is hot off the University of Wisconsin Press. Against the backdrop of factory-style farming that dominates American agriculture, these accomplishments look rather like miracles  — or would, had they originated magically instead of through much hard, persistent, savvy and occasionally heretical work.

That kind of work deserves success but doesn’t always achieve it. So maybe there is a miracle after all in the financial results: Despite the relentless pressure for bigness, for automation, for bending natural forces to human will in the quest for bigger yields, DeVore’s exemplary resisters have been able to make good livings while producing food in earth-friendlier ways.

And not all of them are small-scale, organics-minded players on what might be called the fringe of U.S. food production. There is also Gabe Brown, who produces crops and cattle on 5,400 acres at the edge of Bismarck, North Dakota.

Through an innovative program of the Burleigh County Soil Conservation District, Brown has dramatically raised the organic content, moisture retention and overall health of his soil with intensive cover plantings in the off-season and a tweaked version of rotational pasturing called “mob grazing” (smaller paddocks, larger animal concentrations, shorter durations at each site). DeVore writes:

There is a photo that has acquired almost legendary status in Burleigh County. It features one of Gabe Brown’s fields after 13 inches of rain fell in 24 hours. The picture shows no standing water on this low-lying field, even though plots on neighboring land are inundated. Brown has created a soil ecosystem that allows water to infiltrate quite efficiently. And unlike a field that’s been drained through artificial tiling—sending water at rocket speed through the profile and eventually downstream—Brown’s fields retain that moisture underground, meaning plants can access it during drier periods.

DeVore was shown the picture by Kristine Nichols, then a federal field scientist working on soil microbiology, who said her training held that no farmer could make a positive change in soil health within a lifetime, because the processes just took too long.

Now, science has established that the eminently reachable target of raising soil’s organic matter from 1 percent to 3 percent doubles its water-holding capacity, a fact you can bet I will keep in mind in adding compost to next year’s raised beds and sub-irrigated planters. (Might be my shot at re-opening the poultry issue with Sallie, too….)

Farm boy turned journalist

Brian DeVore
I can’t really think of anyone better to write this book than Brian DeVore, a farm boy turned journalist and someone I’ve known slightly for the last 20-some years through his work at the Land Stewardship Project. As we spoke about the book the other day I realized I hadn’t known much about his life and work before LSP. For example, I didn’t know if he had ever farmed as an adult, or wanted to.

I thought at one time I might want to farm, yes. I grew up on a 240-acre farm, a crop and livestock farm in southwest Iowa, and I finished high school in 1980 and thought I’d go to college for a couple years first. Just as I started college, though, the economic crisis in farming struck.

My dad said, “Here’s the thing. We’re OK financially, and if you want to farm I’ll help you get started. What I’m concerned about, I’m seeing farmers who are good operators and they’re going out of business. You would need a few years to get your feet underneath you anyway, and I’m afraid this situation is going to undermine you before you can get started.”So I thought, well, I’m not going to have anything to do with agriculture. I was a fish and wildlife biology major, and then I got a degree in agriculture journalism. And you could specialize, so I specialized in fish and wildlife  — I thought I was going to be an outdoor writer, like Mark Trail. But while I was Iowa State, there were all these reports coming out about how contaminated rural wells were, the wildlife habitat we were losing, and I started to see a connection between the number of farmers on the land and the environmental health of that land, both of them declining rapidly. So that drew my journalistic focus back to farming, with a new connection to my passion for wildlife and habitat health.

[cms_ad:x101]A further awakening came during DeVore’s post-college stint as a writer for a slick, mainstream magazine called Farm Futures that was published for “some of the largest farmers in the country.” A strength of American farming, he says in the book, is farmers’ willingness to share information and work cooperatively, but now he encountered a “troubling trend”:

Some of these farmers were unwilling to be interviewed for stories about a particular innovative production or marketing technique they were using. “What’s in it for me?” was a version of the response I would get over the telephone. They expressed concern that sharing their “trade secrets” would put them at a competitive disadvantage with their neighbors—who they now saw as rivals—for land, market share, and profits. For someone who grew up in an era when farmers still got together to shell corn or bale hay communally, this was a real eye opener.

An increasing number of farmers were raising an increasingly undifferentiated product: corn and soybeans for the international grain trade, for example. When one was in a position to take advantage of a market opportunity that paid a little bit more—high-oil soybeans or extra-lean hogs, for example—the last thing they wanted was other farmers horning in on their financial success.

Within a few years he had moved on to LSP, a nonprofit devoted to promoting sustainable agriculture and fighting against various abuses in corporate, industrial-scale agribusiness; among other things, he produces the organization’s Land Stewardship Letter and its annual CSA directory of producers in Minnesota and western Wisconsin.

The problem of scale

DeVore is careful in this book, as he was in our interview, to avoid any suggestion that this notion of “wildly successful farming”  — agriculture by “ecological agrarians … who never really separated the natural world from food production”  — presents any quick or easy fix for the practices so predominant now. After all, knowing it’s possible to make a good living on eight acres of organic vegetables may not turn the heads of many a mortgagee devoted to huge spreads in what a Montana rancher likes to call the “Corn, Bean, Feedlot Machine.”

But he did, in fact, find some practices that are readily scalable. Gabe Brown isn’t a particularly big farmer by North Dakota standards, DeVore points out, but turning 5,400 acres into floodproof cropland with lowered irrigation requirements could draw a crowd.

From my home state of Indiana, of all places, DeVore reports on a public-private partnership called the Conservation Cropping Systems Initiative, or CSSI, which has taken on the sad situation that maybe only 2 percent of U.S. farmers bother with the offseason cover plantings that retain soil and improve its health between crops.

In the early 2000s, he reports, about 20,000 acres of Hoosier cropland was cover cropped, and by 2013 the figure had risen to only about a half-million acres … before doubling in the next  three years to a million acres, or about 8 percent of total acreage:

As of this writing, no other Corn Belt state is even close to having that high a percentage of its land protected with cover crops. Indiana’s success has farmers, soil scientists, and environmentalists across the country excited about the potential CCSI holds as a national model for bringing our agricultural landscape back to life. Such a model is needed—despite all the buzz these days around providing continuous living cover for the land year-round, little progress has been made in getting a significant number of U.S. farmers to plant cover crops on a regular basis, making what has been accomplished in Indiana even more impressive.

Also encouraging, for those of us who like to eat sustainably produced food as well as for those who might want to raise it, is a kind of “reverse brain drain” that DeVore sees in a new generation of farmers who have come to the land from nonfarm backgrounds in life and education. Tim Landgraf, mentioned above, was a metallurgical engineer; Martin Jaus studied wildlife management and Loretta Jaus went to college in wildlife biology; Peter Allen abandoned his almost-Ph.D. in restoration ecology to try building a farm on a steep 220 acres in Wisconsin’s Kickapoo Valley.

No official numbers are available, but interviews I’ve conducted over the past few decades show getting an agronomy or ag business degree from a land grant university—the traditional academic- based pathway into production agriculture—no longer monopolizes the way young people enter farming. A striking number of people are going into food production after receiving training and working in the fields of environmental science, wildlife biology, ecological restoration, and other areas related to protecting and studying the environment.

These are people who went into the field set on the belief that by working for a natural resource agency or an environmental nonprofit, they could help leave the land better than they found it. But somewhere along the way, they took an off-ramp and dived into a profession many environmentalists see as the antithesis to a healthy ecosystem: agriculture. When I ask them why, the answer is invariably a variation on a theme:

“I felt I could have a bigger impact on the ecological health of the land through farming.”

The value of these approaches, especially those aimed at improving soil health, can only rise “as the climate gets more extreme,” DeVore told me. “And I don’t say that lightly.”

We’ve had an incredible fall here, with these extreme rains  — and it’s heartbreaking, you know, to see somebody who’s spent all season trying to raise this good crop and the ground is so saturated they can’t get it out. Even with crop insurance, lots of  farmers will be asking, What can I do to deal with these extremes?

 

 

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