Rep. Heather Edelson (HD49A) Update: April 16, 20217

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Dear Neighbors, 

On Sunday, Daunte Wright  – a son, father, nephew and 20 year old Minnesotan was killed by an officer in Brooklyn Center. My heart goes out to his family for their tremendous loss. There is no question that Daunte Wright should be alive today. As a mother, I am both sad and angry over what parents of Black children face every day when they send their children out into the world.  

As a public safety committee member, I am committed to policy work that will ensure every Minnesotan is safe – we must address the injustices in our communities that Black, Brown, and Indigenous community members face on a daily basis. This week legislation was proposed that would limit the ability of law enforcement to make stops based solely on minor equipment violations such as expired tabs or having something hanging from the rear view mirror. Many Policing reforms were also passed last Summer after the killing of George Flloyd. The time to address bias that lives in communities is now. We as a State must demand better — each and every one of us has a role to play in keeping all Minnesotans safe.

Minnesota Vaccine Update 

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Today, 1.5 million Minnesotans are now fully vaccinated. Last week my husband and I received our vaccines at the Minneapolis Urban League – we are most grateful to Nurse Kelly and Black Nurses Rock for all of their tireless efforts in vaccinating Minnesotans. 

Need a Vaccine? Sign up on the Vaccine Connector, or use the Vaccine Finder  to find locations that have available vaccines.

The CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met on Wednesday regarding the Johnson and Johnson vaccine and has noted that the pause will continue for one more week for this vaccine. That said, vaccines continue with Maderna and Pfizer in Minnesota and across the U.S. 

MN House of Representatives Passes the Housing Omnibus Bill Thursday Evening

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Having a safe and secure place to call home is critical for Minnesotans’ health, economic security, and opportunities for achievement. Stable housing is the foundation for success. Our Housing budget will produce more affordable housing in Minnesota as well as ensure Minnesotans have access to safe and stable housing. A copy of the legislation can be reviewed here.

The next stop for this legislation is to be negotiated with the Senate in a conference committee. The above bill is the House position to start the negotiation. I will post the final results of the conference committee in the next few weeks.

Senate DFL Week in Review: April 16, 2021

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2021 Budget Bills on the Floor 
and everything happening in the Legislature this week.


#1

Judiciary Budget fails to meet community demands

The Senate this week passed its judiciary budget bill. The committee was given a $90 million target, which allows for some investments in the state’s court and corrections system, and in some public safety requests. Of the target, $20 million of that target was reserved for disaster assistance for our local communities.

The bill, however, is a stark portrait of what the Senate Republican priorities aren’t; the bill contains no policing and criminal justice reform, no justice programs, and little in the way of reducing the intersectional causes behind crime and recidivism. Read more >>

#2

Consumer protection, clean energy absent from Republican budget bill

Senate Republicans passed a budget bill this week intended to address consumer protection and energy issues. Although the name of one of the committees that generated the bill is Commerce and Consumer Protection, the legislation contained little for actual Minnesota consumers. And in sharp contrast to the clean energy priorities of the DFL House and Governor Walz, the bill falls woefully short of funding energy project that will bring the state closer to a carbon-free future. Read more >>

#3

Higher Ed bill passes floor; heads to conference committee

The Senate’s higher education omnibus budget bill passed with a floor vote of 38-29, with most DFLers voting no due to the bill’s low budget target and lack of funding for the coming two years. Read more >>


POCI CAUCUS

Housing Omnibus Bill Approved by Minnesota House

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA – Yesterday, the Minnesota House approved the Omnibus Housing Bill, which funds a variety of programs aimed at helping create more affordable housing, and provisions to ensure Minnesotans are safely and stably housed. The bill passed on a vote of 69-62.

“Housing insecurity negatively impacts economic security, health outcomes and educational achievement. This proposal addresses the persistent and long-term needs in every corner of Minnesota,” said Rep. Alice Hausman (DFL-Saint Paul), Housing Finance and Policy chair. “All session, we heard personal testimony and those stories made an impression on every committee member. Advocates helped us craft a bill which will have meaningful impact across the state, to help ensure everyone has a safe place to call home.”

More than 572,000 Minnesotan households pay more than they can afford for housing, more than 1 in every 4 households in the state. On any given night, over 10,000 Minnesotans experience homelessness, a number that has only grown since 2015, and greatly impacts Black, Indigenous, and Minnesotans of color. All of these are numbers that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Access to affordable, safe, and secure housing is critical for the health and wellbeing of our families and our communities,” said House Speaker Melissa Hortman. “Minnesota is facing a housing crisis that has been made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic. Our budget takes significant steps to create more affordable housing opportunities, get more Minnesotans into homeownership, provide support and stability for those at risk, and address our inexcusable racial disparities.” 

“Time and again, we’ve seen Republican politicians pursue policies that would kick Minnesotans out of their homes and apartments to the streets during a global pandemic,” said Majority Leader Ryan Winkler. “The last thing Minnesotans need is being rocked by a housing crisis on par with the 2008 economic collapse. Minnesota has the resources to provide safe, affordable housing for everyone, but we’ll never meet that goal if Republican politicians keep putting the rich and well-connected ahead of renters and homeowners.”

Provisions of the bill include:

  • Funding for the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency (MHFA) for specific programs.
  • Establishes the lead safe homes grant program and a task force on shelter resident rights and shelter provider practices and contains amendments to other various programs administered by MHFA. 
  • Funding for various programs related to affordable housing.
  • Provisions related to the Minnesota Bond Allocation Act, residential rental housing/ landlord and tenant law and manufactured housing.

“Minnesota faced a housing crisis – and that was before a global pandemic illustrated just how vital a safe home is to our health, happiness and economic security,” said Rep. Michael Howard (DFL – Richfield) vice chair of the Housing Finance and Policy Committee. “There is no place like home, yet in Minnesota an affordable place to live is out of reach for hundreds of thousands of families. We are working to create a Minnesota where everyone can afford the roof over their head and this bill takes important steps to build that future.”  

A spreadsheet of the investment made in the Omnibus Housing Bill can be found here. A video recording of today’s floor debate is available on the House Public Information YouTube channel.

Minnesota House approves Legacy Amendment investments

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA – Today, the Minnesota House of Representatives passed legislation that invests $648.6 million in protecting and enhancing Minnesota’s outdoor heritage, clean water, arts and cultural heritage, and parks and trails. Authored by Rep. Leon Lillie (DFL – North St. Paul), the bill outlines how funds generated by the state’s Legacy Amendment would be allocated to benefit people and communities across Minnesota.  

“Minnesotans care deeply about our state,” said Rep. Lillie, chair of the Legacy Finance Committee. “We are proud of Minnesota’s great outdoors, clean water, and arts and culture, and we want to preserve and enhance them. Investing in these priorities will make our state an even better place to live for current and future generations.”

In 2008, Minnesotans voted to adopt the Legacy Amendment, which increased sales taxes by three-eighths of one percent. The revenue this constitutional amendment generates is divided between four funds. Sixty-six percent of the revenue is split evenly between the Outdoor Heritage Fund and the Clean Water Fund, 19.75 percent goes to the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, and the Parks and Trails Fund receives 14.25 percent. All of these funds are appropriated every two years except the Outdoor Heritage Fund, which is appropriated annually.  

“Investing in the outdoors, clean water, arts and culture, and parks and trails is an investment in our future,” said House Speaker Melissa Hortman. “For more than a decade, the Legacy Amendment has funded initiatives to benefit people and communities across our entire state, and today’s legislation continues building on that success.” 

“Our state created a dedicated, voter-approved fund for investments in the arts, culture, and the outdoors because Minnesotans understand these are things that should not get swept up in partisan politics,” said Majority Leader Ryan Winkler. “The Legacy fund means that our parks, trails, museums, and artists cannot be used as a bargaining chip by Republicans to pass their agenda of tax cuts for the biggest corporations and wealthiest Minnesotans.”

Outdoor Heritage Fund

The bill invests $130.8 million from the Outdoor Heritage Fund in Minnesota’s prairies, wetlands, forests, and habitat for fish, game, and wildlife. It provides funding for projects including native prairie protection, wetland restoration, wildlife enhancements, forest fragmentation prevention, shoreline restoration, and strategic land acquisition. The bill follows project recommendations offered by the Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council (LSOHC) and emphasizes ways that the Outdoor Heritage Fund can more broadly impact BIPOC communities. 

Clean Water Fund

$256.7 million from the Clean Water Fund would be used to protect and restore lakes, rivers, streams, groundwater, and drinking water sources. The bill delivers funding for assessing and monitoring water quality, preventing contamination, improving sewer systems, studying agricultural impacts, managing the water supply, assisting local governments, and more. It also includes measures to protect Minnesotans’ health, such as amending the health risk limit for PFOS.  

Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund

The legislation provides $149.7 million to support the arts, arts education, and arts access and to preserve Minnesota’s history and cultural heritage. Almost half of these funds would go to the Minnesota State Arts Board, which distributes funds to several hundred artists and organizations each year. The bill also supports the Minnesota Historical Society, libraries, public television and radio, museums, cultural organizations, zoos, county fairs, and Native American language preservation initiatives.  

Parks and Trails Fund

The bill includes $110.6 million to support parks and trails of regional and statewide significance. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources would receive $43.8 million for state parks, trails, and recreation areas and $21.9 million for parks and trails in Greater Minnesota. The Metropolitan Council would receive $43.8 million for parks in the metro area. Additional funding would be used to develop a statewide plan for parks and trails outside the metro and to fund restoration and maintenance work. 

The Legacy bill addresses racial and cultural inequalities to ensure that these funds benefit all Minnesotans. It directs state agencies and other funding recipients to ensure employment, educational, and engagement opportunities are available to Minnesotans from underrepresented communities, particularly children and young adults. It also encourages potential applicants from a greater diversity of organizations and requires assessments on whether the funding celebrates cultural diversity or reaches diverse communities. 

Video of the floor session will be available on House Public Information Services’ YouTube channel.  

Rep. Kristin Bahner (HD34B) Update: April 13, 2021

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Dear Neighbors,

Words cannot express the depth of sorrow, heal the pain, or begin to take away the sting of losing someone you love. No words can stop the fear and relief of a mother realizing the story in the news was not about her child. 

My heart is heavy with grief. As a legislator, I am committed to finding a way to right this wrong by being open, persistent, and at times – stubborn in search of paths that are more just, more real – that seek to cease the pain of a heart in rebellion, steeped with grief, that cannot be quelled.

For the family of Daunte Wright, I ask we all hold them in our care and respect their wishes for peace. For our community, I ask for the quiet dignity to allow those suffering, the space and care they so rightly need.

Continue reading “Rep. Kristin Bahner (HD34B) Update: April 13, 2021”

Legislature’s POCI Caucus and UBLC Condemn Police Shooting of Daunte Wright, Outline Police Accountability Bills

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Saint Paul, MINNESOTA – Today, members of the Minnesota Legislature’s People of Color and Indigenous (POCI) Caucus and United Black Legislative Caucus (UBLC) discussed the police shooting of Daunte Wright and actions DFL legislators are proposing to improve accountability for law enforcement, including:

  • allowing local governments to establish civilian oversight councils
  • banning the alteration, erasure, or destruction of body-worn camera recordings and withholding footage
  • prohibiting peace officers from affiliating with white supremacist groups
  • providing funding for community organizations working to prevent crime 

“We are once again dealing with the trauma of the killing of a Black man by police. It feels like we are taking one step forward, and two steps back,” said Rep. Vang, Chair of the POCI Caucus (DFL – Brooklyn Center). “My city is hurting to see a beloved member of our community killed so recklessly as we are left with an occupied city that is damaged nearly beyond recognition. We cannot keep doing the same things and expect a different result, we must do better to ensure justice for victims and peace for our future.”

Continue reading “Legislature’s POCI Caucus and UBLC Condemn Police Shooting of Daunte Wright, Outline Police Accountability Bills”

Four hours of debate — and 50 proposed amendments — but climate and energy omnibus approved

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Is renewable energy cheaper, cleaner and capable of making Minnesota a more self-sufficient state? Or is it dirty, inefficient and expensive?

It depends upon who you ask. But it seems to be the direction the vast majority of electrical utilities are going. And moving Minnesota’s energy production and use toward a carbon-free future is the overriding focus of the omnibus climate and energy finance bill.

The bill, as amended, was approved by the House Climate and Energy Finance and Policy Committee Friday, but not before navigating through 50 proposed amendments and four hours of debate that stretched over two days. Continue reading.

Sen. John Hoffman (SD36) Update: April 12, 2021

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Dear Friends and Neighbors,

Once again, our community is in a state of shock at the death of an unarmed black man in an encounter with law enforcement. Daunte Wright should be alive today, but instead his life was cut tragically short in a matter of seconds. My condolences and heart goes out to his family, his friends, and our entire community as we grieve over his death.

It has not even been a full year since the murder of George Floyd, and with the eyes of the world on Minnesota, another black man has been killed by a system that is not working. It is up to each of us to play a role in taking the steps necessary to achieve true accountability and reform, and to ensure that justice comes. 

Continue reading “Sen. John Hoffman (SD36) Update: April 12, 2021”

UBLC statement on killing of Daunte Wright

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA – The United Black Legislative Caucus issued the following statement after the death of Daunte Wright at the hands of a Brooklyn Center Police Officer on Sunday:

“Our community has been forced to withstand unthinkable trauma over the past year, and we’re angry that another young Black man has been taken from us by law enforcement. This is unacceptable and the constant cycle of police officers killing Black Minnesotans must end. The outcome Daunte Wright faced is an outcome we – as Black parents, grandparents, siblings and other family members – constantly worry about for our loved ones and ourselves. This shouldn’t be the norm, it can’t be the norm, and as lawmakers, it’s all of our responsibility to do whatever we can to ensure it no longer is the norm.

“We need accountability and we need it now. The Minnesota House is advancing much-needed solutions to identify bad officers and keep them off the streets, strengthen community oversight, and ban white supremacists from serving as officers. Daunte Wright should still be with us. His family deserves justice, and our community deserves changes to our laws that will ensure officers can be held accountable and trust can be built within our communities and those charged to protect and serve.

Continue reading “UBLC statement on killing of Daunte Wright”

POCI Caucus Statement on Shooting of Daunte Wright

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA — On Sunday, police fatally shot Daunte Wright during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center. The Minnesota People of Color and Indigenous (POCI) Caucus released the following statement:

“Once again, a young Black man who was beloved by his family and community was killed by a police officer during a traffic stop. This painful statement could be recited by memory at this point. However, while this tragedy is distressingly familiar, we must remember that Daunte Wright was a unique human being, brimming with life and potential until it was cut short in a senseless act of violence. Daunte Wright’s life mattered.

This perpetual trauma wrought upon our Black communities is exhausting. To our community; please take time to rest and recover if you are able, these coming days will be incredibly difficult. We will need our energy and health to seek justice and maintain peace in our communities. At the Legislature we have several police accountability bills that are ready to be voted on and sent to the Governor, including the House DFL Public Safety & Criminal Justice Reform budget bill which contains several critical reforms. We strongly urge our Republican colleagues to join us in creating a public safety system that will protect the lives of people like Daunte Wright.

Black Lives Matter.”

The People of Color & Indigenous (POCI) Caucus includes Reps. Esther Agbaje (59B), Jamie Becker-Finn (42B), Cedrick Frazier (45A), Aisha Gomez (62B), Hodan Hassan (Vice- Chair 62A), Kaohly Her (64A), Athena Hollins (66B), Heather Keeler (04A), Fue Lee (59A), Carlos Mariani (65B), Rena Moran (65A), Mohamud Noor (60B), Ruth Richardson (52B), John Thompson (67A), Samantha Vang (Chair, 40B), Jay Xiong (67B), Tou Xiong (53B), and Senators Bobby Joe Champion (59), Omar Fateh (62), Melisa Franzen (49), Foung Hawj (67), Mary Kunesh (41), Patricia Torres Ray (Chair, 63)