Rep. Kelly Morrison (HD33B) Update: April 10, 2021

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Dear Neighbors, 

I hope those who celebrate Easter or Passover had a nice celebration and that everyone had a chance to enjoy the spring weather we had last weekend!

Legislators gaveled back in for session on Monday after our customary mid-session recess to observe the holidays. The Legislature is assembling budget bills and committees spent the week vetting them, adopting amendments, and most importantly, hearing from the public. 

Here’s an update from the Capitol: 

Continue reading “Rep. Kelly Morrison (HD33B) Update: April 10, 2021”

House DFLers Highlight Public Safety Budget with Funding, Reform and Justice for Minnesotans

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA – Thursday, House DFL lawmakers discussed their 2021 Public Safety & Criminal Justice Reform budget bill. The legislation invests in law enforcement, improves police accountability, and listens to the victims of sex crimes. 

“Every person deserves to live with human dignity in their community. To deliver on this promise, we have the responsibility to ensure our systems treat all Minnesotans with fairness and respect, while delivering justice,” said Rep. Carlos Mariani (DFL – Saint Paul), chair of the House Public Safety & Criminal Justice Reform Committee. “In the midst of the Derek Chauvin trial, with the eyes of the world once again upon our state, it’s incumbent upon all of us to listen to Minnesotans and deliver the change they’re seeking so they can experience true public safety, no matter where they live or what they look like. Our work is inspired by the diverse citizens who are stepping up to be part of making communities safe, from multi-racial neighborhood based intervention work to advocates for juveniles and vulnerable adults. We have the ability to deliver critical funding while enacting reforms Minnesotans are counting on, and this bill does exactly that.”

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Sen. Melisa Franzen (SD49) Update: April 9, 2021

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Volume 6, Issue 13

April 9, 2021

A video from STEM Advocacy Day

Sen. Franzen STEM Advocacy Day

A weekly message from your Senator

Dear Constituents and Friends,

I hope you all had a great last week during the legislative break. While the last few days have been dreary we all know that the warm weather is almost here. The overcast weather matched the mood in the Minnesota Senate this week as we hit our third deadline today. Next week we will start to hear omnibus bills on the floor, you can find the schedule on the Minnesota Senate website.

Governor Walz and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) announced this week that Minnesota will receive a federal Community Vaccination Clinic, this site will help Minnesota augment the state vaccination efforts. The site will be located at the Minnesota State Fairgrounds and receive over 150,000 doses over eight weeks. Vaccinations will begin at the Fairgrounds on April 14th. 

Continue reading “Sen. Melisa Franzen (SD49) Update: April 9, 2021”

Sen. John Hoffman (SD36) Update: April 9, 2021

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Dear Friends and Neighbors,

Throughout my many years of advocacy work, including local, state and federal I have seen good bills come and go.  I have also seen policy discussions lead to nothing getting done. This is the historic representation of what people with disabilities have and continue to receive year after year.  I recall moving back home to Minnesota in 2000 and celebrating those who were on waiting lists for services were able to finally receive those much-needed services. It was not a movement by our elected officials that preempt this rather it was a court action that started that process.  In the end, finally, people with disabilities were acknowledged and counted for. 

Continue reading “Sen. John Hoffman (SD36) Update: April 9, 2021”

Sen. Ron Latz (SD46) Update: April 9, 2021

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CAPITOL UPDATE APRIL 9, 2021

Latz Leads Successful Effort to Add Criminal Sexual Conduct Statutory Reforms to Judiciary & Public Safety Budget Bill

In March of this year the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled in the case State v. Khalil that under current Minnesota law, an individual charged with sexual assault of a person that is mentally incapacitated due to consumption of drugs or alcohol may not be found guilty if the victim is voluntarily intoxicated, due to a poorly written definition found in state statute. This decision received significant media and social media attention and brought renewed focus to ongoing bipartisan efforts to reform Minnesota’s criminal sexual conduct statutes, found in much of the recommendations of the Criminal Sexual Conduct Statutory Reform Working Group.

On Wednesday I joined Senate and House colleagues in announcing a fix to this statute with bipartisan support and stakeholder agreement. On Thursday, my amendment to encapsulate the working group’s recommendations was adopted in the Judiciary Committee.

Continue reading “Sen. Ron Latz (SD46) Update: April 9, 2021”

Sen. Ann Johnson Stewart (SD44) Update: April 9, 2021

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Week-in-Review Video


A message from your Senator

Constituents and friends,

We returned from our mid-session break this week to a busy schedule of budgetary hearings. Our primary job in this year’s legislative session is to reach agreement between the Senate, House, and Governor’s administration on an approximately $50 billion state budget for Fiscal Years 2022 and 2023, which will require significant negotiation given our divided Legislature.

After both chambers pass their own versions of omnibus bills that have been created by nearly every Senate and House committee (an omnibus bill is a single long bill that contains many individual budget/policy proposals related to the committee’s topic of jurisdiction), leaders from the House and Senate committees meet with each other, as well as the Governor and his staff, to discuss their disagreements and negotiate a final product that all sides (mostly) agree on. As you can imagine, this is often a long and contentious process.

Continue reading “Sen. Ann Johnson Stewart (SD44) Update: April 9, 2021”

House Early Childhood and Workforce Committees Pass Historic Investments in Early Care and Learning

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA – Today, two Minnesota House committees, Early Childhood Finance and Policy and Workforce and Business Development Finance and Policy, finalized budget bills to increase investments in the youngest Minnesotans and their caregivers by nearly $600 million in state and federal funds.

“The early care and learning sector was in crisis even before the pandemic,” said Rep. Dave Pinto (DFL – St. Paul), chair of the Early Childhood committee and author of that committee’s budget bill. “The opportunity gaps in our state start in the earliest months and years. But the economics of this sector are broken, unaffordable or inaccessible for families, with poverty wages for providers – our most important teachers. The ambitious agenda we’ve passed today will take great strides toward addressing these needs.”

“Increasing access to child care is crucial to sustaining and strengthening our state’s economic stabilization, economic security, and economic recovery,” said Rep. Mohamud Noor (DFL – Minneapolis), chair of the Workforce and Business Development committee and author of that committee’s budget bill. “Our Workforce and Business Development budget increases investment in child care business development in underserved areas, complementing the Early Childhood budget, which invests in early childhood initiatives that will help improve our current and future workforce development in Minnesota.”

“House DFLers believe that all of our children deserve a great start in life,” said House Speaker Melissa Hortman. “Our budget will make significant investments in early care and learning to expand availability, address our inexcusable opportunity gaps and ensure our children have the opportunity to succeed.” 

In earlier hearings, the Early Childhood committee found that providing high-quality early care and learning to the low-income young children who need it most would cost approximately an additional $1 billion. The committee’s budget closes that gap significantly by investing:

  • more than $200 million to raise reimbursement rates for the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP), finally getting Minnesota closer to the federal standard,
  • nearly $40 million in early learning scholarships directed to the very youngest and most vulnerable Minnesotans, and
  • more than $300 million in monthly payments to providers and frontline workers, in recognition of the fundamental need for ongoing public support.

The two committees’ budgets also expand the supply of child care, including grants for:

  • $10 million through the Department of Employment and Economic Development
  • $10 million through the Department of Human Services
  • $2 million through the Minnesota Initiative Foundations

Additional funds are used for a wide variety of evaluation and reform efforts in this critical sector.

More information about the hearings at which the budget was approved, including supporting documents, can be found on the Early Childhood committee webpage. and Workforce & Business Development committee webpage. Videos of the hearings are available on House Public Information Services’ YouTube channel

Rep. Zack Stephenson (HD36A) Update: April 9, 2021

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Dear Neighbors,

Since we’ve returned from our customary weeklong break to observe Easter and Passover, we’ve been vetting and advancing our House budget bills through committees. The budget contains investments to address Minnesotans’ difficulties now, and aims to help people thrive once the pandemic is over.

This session, I’ve had the extremely rewarding job to chair the House Commerce Committee. Our committee has completed work assembling the new Commerce budget bill with various, significant consumer protection provisions. Here’s a look at some of the highlights:

  • Addresses catalytic converter theft problem
  • Protects Minnesotans from predatory pay day lending practices
  • Creates a Student Borrower’s Bill of Rights
  • Protects Minnesotans from price gouging essential goods during times of emergency
  • Establishes a Prescription Drug Affordability Board to help drive down prices
  • Protects children from toys with harmful levels of toxins like lead
Continue reading “Rep. Zack Stephenson (HD36A) Update: April 9, 2021”

Sen. Steve Cwodzinski (SD48) Update: April 9, 2021

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April 9. 2021

Important Notice About Emails

Late yesterday evening my colleagues and I were informed of a glitch with the Senate website that caused some emails to not go through between 8:30am on Friday, April 2 and 1pm on Thursday, April 8. The issue is now resolved, but the messages may not be retrievable. If you reached out during that time and did not receive a reply, please resend your message. I deeply apologize for the inconvenience.


Sen. Cwodzinski in His Office

Controversial Education Bill Moves Forward

On Wednesday in the Senate Education Committee we voted on this year’s omnibus education bill. I was disappointed to see vouchers included in this bill, as well as a lack of investment in the basic funding formula. Per-pupil state aid adjusted to inflation has failed to keep up with our need for almost the past 20 years. There was also a provision that discriminates against transgender students, and I cannot support that.

Continue reading “Sen. Steve Cwodzinski (SD48) Update: April 9, 2021”

Rep. Laurie Pryor (HD48A) Update: April 9, 2021


Neighbors,

The legislature has returned from Easter/Passover break and we are continuing work on the two-year budget.

This week, the Early Childhood committee, which I serve as vice-chair, approved HF 2230, the Early Childhood Finance and Policy bill. Earlier, during our committee’s work, we learned about the scope and the severity of the crisis that exists in early care and education. The years from birth to five are critical for healthy growth and development and public investments are at the lowest during those years. We also know that parents are stretched thin to afford care and too many childcare workers are among the least paid professionals.

There are many challenges, but if our House Early Childhood budget bill becomes law, it will make a significant down payment toward the investments we need to support Minnesota’s youngest and their families.   

Continue reading “Rep. Laurie Pryor (HD48A) Update: April 9, 2021”