Friday, July 17, 2015

Today's Featured Minneapolis Business: Garage Door MN

Garagedoormn.com has many years experience serving the entire Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area. They provide excellent customer service and provide valued expert opinions. Whether you have a regular residential garage door that needs to be replaced or serviced, or you have large commercial garage doors at your place of business they can help. 

No job is too big or too small for the staff at Garagedoormn.com. They also work with all types, makes, and models of garage doors, garage door openers, and gate motor systems. So the next time you are looking for a top rated garage door repair company in Minneapolis, or garage door repair specialists in St. Paul make sure to give Garage Door MN a call at (612) 405-0011.

They handle any type of garage door problem, broken springs, broken door, opener not working, broken garage door cables and collapsed panels. Garage doors are the largest moving objects on your home so they can have some major issues. It is always important to remember to never try to attempt dangerous repairs on your own due to risk of injury. 

NAACP calls for independent investigation of Green Line arrest

Questions about an arrest on the Green Line. MPR’s Riham Feshir reports, “Draon Armstrong still regrets not buying that $1.75 light rail ticket, an infraction that he says got him slammed to the ground by a Metro Transit police officer and thrown in jail. … ‘He dangled me over the railing,’ Armstrong said of the police officer. ‘And he pulled out my hair, too, and my hair just don't pull out easily, so you got to yank it.’ … The NAACP of Minneapolis has called for an independent review of the incident after cell phone video was released to the FOX-9 news channel. The NAACP has refused to meet with Metro Transit, demanding policy changes by the Metropolitan Council, which oversees the transit agency.”

Hmm, if the principle is equal pay for equal work, shouldn’t the women be getting paid a lot more than the men? “A Senate committee hearing Wednesday was supposed to focus on corruption within FIFA, soccer’s international governing body, and for the most part it did. But it also veered into another hot topic for the sport: disparities in pay between male and female players, an issue that hit the headlines after the U.S. Women’s National Team won the World Cup earlier this month,” writes Travis Waldron for the Huffington Post. “ Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) also pressed Flynn about the disparity in pay for women’s soccer players. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) introduced a resolution calling for equal pay in international soccer on Monday.”

Venues are definitely going to want to stay open while not being able to sell their most profitable goods. The Star Tribune’s Eric Roper writes, “A proposal winding through [Minneapolis] City Hall would let businesses with special late-night food licenses continue offering entertainment after 2 a.m. The hope is that by allowing DJs to keep spinning tunes, bars and nightclubs may keep enough customers inside to make food service viable. That could help stagger the club exodus, reducing the chaos in the streets. … State law prohibits selling alcohol after 2 a.m., giving the city little leeway. The city allows customers to finish drinks until 2:30 a.m., when they have to leave unless the business has a license to keep offering food.”

Tenure must be nice. “[UW-Madison professors] Sara Goldrick-Rab is under fire for finding future Badgers on Twitter and essentially encouraging them to take their money elsewhere — as well as for comparing Gov. Scott Walker to Adolf Hitler,” Karen Herzog rights in the Journal Sentinel. “Goldrick-Rab is a tenured professor of educational policy studies and sociology with a national profile in both her field of research and the ongoing debate over faculty tenure at Wisconsin public universities. She has openly said she's looking for another job because she believes academic freedom is in jeopardy in Wisconsin.”

In other news…

Really sad news from Minneapolis: Artist and activist Susan Spiller killed during suspected home invastion. [Star Tribune]

Mary Jo Copeland’s orphanage dream is coming to an end. [Star Tribune]

Creditors call for more time for victims to file sex-abuse claims against the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul. The current deadline is August 3. [MPR]

In addition to not kissing live chickens, consider not kissing the frozen variety, either. “Chicken products recalled after MN customers sickened” [KARE]

Finally. “The Real Story Behind Popular Bearded Lady Motorcycle and Freak Show at 331 Club” [RedCurrent]

I, for one, welcome our new heavily buttered overlords. “Northfield’s blue barn becomes a Culver’s landmark” [MPR]



Read Source: https://www.minnpost.com/glean/2015/07/naacp-calls-independent-investigation-green-line-arrest

Report finds high concentration of sex offenders in certain Minneapolis neighborhoods

If there was any good news in the results of an examination of where sex offenders live in Minneapolis, it was that there’s no indication that the city attracts offenders from elsewhere in the state.

Instead, the hundreds of sex offenders registered in the city and the county are mostly homegrown. But the task force set up by the city to examine the issue did confirm another of the council’s concerns — that offenders are concentrated in certain neighborhoods of the city. Just five zip codes are home to 790 so-called predatory offenders. All of those zip codes are in the Near North, North Minneapolis and Phillips neighborhoods. Of the total number of offenders, 58 are Level 3 offenders, considered the highest risk.

In the neighborhoods with the highest concentration, 0.71 percent of residents are offenders, said Lauren Martin, director of research at the University of Minnesota's Urban Research and Outreach Engagement Center, which did the research for the task force. “That’s pretty significant,” she told members of the council’s public safety committee Wednesday. “It’s pretty high.”

The final report will be published next month. But the preliminary results caused some frustration among committee members, especially for the two members who represent wards in North Minneapolis. The council knew there were concentrations of offenders when it ordered the work group to examine the problem 28 months ago, even listing those neighborhoods in the resolution it adopted in March of 2013. What they wanted to hear were ways to respond to the issue.

Map Source: 2010 U.S. Census Bureau Boundaries, Data Source: Minnesota Department of Corrections, January 1, 2010

“What’s the plan going forward?” asked Council President Barbara Johnson.

Said Committee Chair Blong Yang: “Part of me is frustrated that we keep doing reports and we don’t have solutions.”

Martin said she didn’t expect a final report to contain recommendations for policy changes, but rather would serve as information to help others look at solutions. Velma Korbel, the director of the city’s Department of Civil Rights, said other city work groups — such as the county criminal justice committee — will use the report to consider and recommend changes to address the problem of over-concentration.

The report detailed one of the side effects of the state’s legal restrictions on where sex offenders can live: a clustering of offenders in the areas where they are allowed, Martin said. And because many landlords refuse to rent to offenders, they tend to congregate in housing where they are accepted. “The issue seems to boil down to housing, housing, housing,” Martin said.

Data provided by MnDOC, Dec. 2014, *3 offenders unaccounted for

The survey was taken among two distinct groups of offenders. The first was through Hennepin County community corrections, via supervisors working with offenders. The second was through Minneapolis police, and conducted when newly released offenders are required to register. Of those who responded through community corrections, the top reasons for living where the did were affordability, proximity to family — and availability. In the second group, half said they lived where they did because they couldn’t find anyplace else.

Martin said a review of studies on the issue shows that while reoffending among sex offenders is lower than the public perceives — they reoffend at lower rates than for other crimes — being homeless increases the recidivism rates.

While the public generally thinks of these offenders as sex offenders, the term used in the study is “offender required to register.” That’s because state law was changed to require a few classifications of offenders to register whose crimes did not have a sexual element. Those are kidnapping and false imprisonment. But the vast majority of those people who must register their residences are still sex offenders.

Also taking part in the work group were representatives from the police department, city attorney’s office, city coordinator’s office, the state department of corrections, the Council on Crime and Justice, social service provider RS Eden,  the county community corrections department, the state sex offender program, the Jordan Area Community Council and the Midtown-Phillips Neighborhood Association.



Read Source: https://www.minnpost.com/politics-policy/2015/07/report-finds-high-concentration-sex-offenders-certain-minneapolis-neighborho

Dayton, Nolan visit storm damaged areas near Brainerd

Gov. Mark Dayton and U.S. Rep. Rick Nolan are assessing storm-damaged areas near Brainerd on Friday.

Monday's severe weather damaged homes and businesses in the area, particularly around Gull, Round and North Long lakes and as far south as Brainerd International Raceway.

The elected officials, along with Public Safety Commissioner Mona Dohman and Department of Natural Resources Commissioner Tom Landwehr, will meet with local officials and fly over the area in a helicopter.

Resorts on Gull Lake and the Gull Dam Recreation Area were damaged and many reservations are being canceled as cleanup and repair efforts begin.

Dutch Cragun told the Brainerd Dispatch that thousands of trees fell on his family resort's golf courses.

“We have a lot more open space now, and plenty of firewood,” Cragun said. “But to have to send people home because we don't have power, that really hurts.”

Guests arriving at Grand View Lodge Monday were turned away because of the lack of power, said General Manager Mark Ronnei. Those already there were not evacuated, but he said many chose to return home.



Read Source: https://www.minnpost.com/political-agenda/2015/07/dayton-nolan-visit-storm-damaged-areas-near-brainerd

Vikings stadium makes MarketWatch list of 'Worst Deals from Sports Teams'

Minneapolis and its new $1 billion-plus publicly-subsidized Vikings stadium made the top of a new list from MarketWatch today: “5 Cities Getting the Worst Deal from Sports Teams.”

The opinion piece by Jason Notte says:

Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League have all played chicken with taxpayers and threatened to take their ball (or puck) to another city willing to foot the bill for new facilities.

Of the deal in Minnesota, he says:

How do you get taxpayers to chip in $500 million on a more than $1 billion stadium when only one city, Indianapolis ($620 million), has ever paid that much? Tell them you’ll move their 54-year-old NFL franchise to Los Angeles.

Vikings owner Zygi Wilf did just that and got the state of Minnesota and the city of Minneapolis to go along for the ride. With the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome’s roof collapse moving games in 2010 and competing L.A. stadium plans just waiting for a team, Minnesota panicked and came up with a plan for a new stadium on the Metrodome site that the state would pay for through “charitable gambling.” Though the plan was approved in 2012, the funding portion never worked out and led to a tax on cigarette inventory instead.

Minneapolis, meanwhile, will end up paying $678 million over its 30-year payment plan once interest, operations and construction costs are factored in. The city earned a Super Bowl hosting gig in 2018, but also got a 150-page list of Super Bowl demands from the NFL that will only cost the host city and state more money.

The other four on the list are:

  • Atlanta area, where “Cobb County will be borrowing $397 million via bonds, including nearly $300 million that will be paid from property taxes, to finance the new SunTrust Park after Braves ownership decided to leave its current digs at Turner Field for the suburbs.”
  • Glendale, Arizona, “with a $455 million football stadium for the Arizona Cardinals, a 15-year, $225 million arena management contract with the Arizona Coyotes and millions more for a spring-training facility for baseball’s White Sox and Dodgers.”
  • Milwaukee, where the new owners of the Bucks “made the city an offer: Pay us $250 million plus interest for a new arena or lose the team... Surprisingly, in a town that will be paying off the Milwaukee Brewers Miller Park (built in 1996) until 2020, this is not going over well. Unfortunately, Milwaukee’s problem just became Wisconsin’s as the state senate approved a deal for public funding that Gov. Scott Walker is expected to approve. Milwaukee and its surrounding county are now on the hook for what will add up to $400 million over 20 years.”
  • Washington D.C., with Major League Soccer: “D.C. United’s new stadium, and the fact that a portion of the city’s $150 million is coming out of a school-modernization program, is a bit much to swallow. However, D.C. United knows that there are enough towns in the Northern Virginia suburbs looking for a team to make them “big time” that it could have its pick if D.C. didn’t pay. It’s getting a half-price deal on the costliest soccer-only stadium in the country because D.C. doesn’t want the team to flee for the suburbs.”


Read Source: https://www.minnpost.com/political-agenda/2015/07/vikings-stadium-makes-marketwatch-list-worst-deals-sports-teams

Bill Clinton to attend Starkey gala in St. Paul honoring George W. Bush

President Bill Clinton is now on the guest list for the July 26 Starkey Hearing Foundation Gala in St. Paul. He joins President George W. Bush, who is being honored at the annual event this year for his contributions to the foundation's charitable work.

Katy Perry is the headline entertainer at the event at St. Paul's RiverCentre, which always features many celebrities. Last year, it raised nearly $9 million.

Foundation officials say Bush helped provide customized hearing devices to 222 people in Tanzania.

In announcing that Clinton will attend next week's gala as a special guest, officials said he'd been honored by the foundation in 2011 and that he has joined many global hearing missions, including work in Zambia, Rwanda and Kenya.



Read Source: https://www.minnpost.com/political-agenda/2015/07/bill-clinton-attend-starkey-gala-st-paul-honoring-george-w-bush

The 100-plus-year history of the anti-vaccination movement

The anti-vaccination movement is not new, as reporter Elizabeth Earl points out in an article published this week on The Atlantic magazine’s website.

In fact, parents have been objecting to vaccines since the British government passed the Vaccination Act of 1840. That law made it compulsory for infants to be vaccinated against smallpox during their first three months. In 1867, the law was expanded to require mandatory vaccination of all children up to age 14. Parents could be fined if they didn’t comply — and put in prison if they couldn’t pay the fines.

Anti-vaccination groups immediately formed. “At first, many local authorizes did not enforce the fines, but by 1871, the law was changed to punish officials if they did not enforce the requirement,” writes Earl. “The working class was outraged at the imposition of fines. Activists raised an outcry, claiming the government was infringing on citizens’ private affairs and decisions.”

Anti-vaccination pamphlets, articles and books were published. People took to the street in angry protests, some of which became violent. 

A lot of misinformation was circulated. Before the smallpox vaccine had been developed, about 4,000 people died from that disease each year in London alone. But the people who opposed universal vaccination — which included the prominent British biologist Alfred Russel Wallace — claimed those numbers were grossly inflated.

Wallace also claimed that the smallpox vaccine was ineffective and caused unnecessary deaths.

And, indeed, smallpox innoculation was not entirely without risk. Some people did become ill after receiving the vaccine, which was sometimes contaminated in those early days with bacteria and other pathogens.

Crossing ‘the pond’

Anti-vaccination activity was not confined to Britain, of course. It spread to other European cities, including Stockholm, Sweden, where by 1872 vaccination rates had fallen to just over 40 percent, according to a 2002 article in BMJ (formerly known as British Medical Journal).

Stockholm residents quickly changed their mind about vaccinations, however, when a major smallpox epidemic swept the city in 1874.

The 1870s also saw the emergence of anti-vaccination activity in the United States. Ironically, the smallpox vaccine’s success was one of the reasons some Americans became skeptical about its benefits, as the authors of the BMJ article explain:

Widespread vaccination in the early part of the century had contained smallpox outbreaks, and vaccination fell into disuse. However, in the 1870s, the disease became epidemic owing to the susceptibility of the population. As states attempted to enforce existing vaccination laws or pass new ones, vigorous anti-vaccination movements arose. … Using pamphlets, court battles, and vigorous fights on the floors of state legislatures, the anti-vaccinationists succeeded in repealing compulsory vaccination laws in California, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Utah, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. A continual battle was waged between public health authorities and anti-vaccinationists, with the anti-vaccinationists battling vaccination in the courts and instigating riots in Montreal and Milwaukee.

Anti-vaccination activists also won a major victory in Britain.

“The British government introduced a key concept in 1898: A “conscientious objector” exemption,” writes Earl. “The clause allowed parents to opt out of compulsory vaccination as long as they acknowledged they understood the choice. Similar to today’s religious exemptions in 47 U.S. states and the personal belief exemptions in 18 states, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, the parents signed paperwork certifying that they knew and accepted the risks associated with not vaccinating.”

Then and now

Although the anti-vaccination movement of the late-19th and early-20th centuries shares some characteristics with today's movement, it was also quite different in at least one important way.

“Modern vaccination activists come from a different world than those in the 19th century,” writes Earl. “While anti-vaxers today are largely upper middle class, the crowd opposing vaccination in the 19th century was largely composed of lower- and working-class British citizens.”

Still, as the authors of the BMJ article point out, the beliefs of people opposed to vaccines “have remained remarkably constant over the better part of two centuries. The movement encompasses a wide range of individuals, from a few who express conspiracy theories, to educated, well informed consumers of health care, who often have a complex rationale for their beliefs.”

Opposition to immunization, which began with the smallpox vaccine all those decades ago, “has not ceased, and probably never will,” they add. “From this realization arises a difficult issue: how should the mainstream medical authorities approach the anti-vaccination movement? A passive reaction could be construed as endangering the health of society, whereas a heavy handed approach can threaten the values of individual liberty and freedom of expression that we cherish. This creative tension will not leave us and cannot be cured by force alone.”

A remarkable achievement

Thankfully, the often-angry opposition to the smallpox vaccine did not stop public health officials from their efforts to eradicate that disfiguring and deadly disease, which many experts believe may have killed more people than any other infectious disease in history.

Smallpox is no longer a health threat — a remarkable public health achievement that is almost entirely the result of worldwide immunization efforts.

The last case of smallpox was reported in 1977.

You can read Earl’s article on The Atlantic’s website. You can also read the BMJ article in full through the U.S. National Library of Medicine's website.



Read Source: https://www.minnpost.com/second-opinion/2015/07/100-plus-year-history-anti-vaccination-movement