Monthly Archives: January 2009

And the train keeps on coming

Transit hit the front page of the Star Tribune again today, as East Metro’s complains that it is not being served. (East Metro means Washington County and Scott County, with Ramsey County and St. Paul counted as served by the Central Corridor.) The Strib notes that:

In addition to the Hiawatha light-rail line from downtown Minneapolis to the Mall of America, the west metro area is getting the Northstar commuter rail line from Minneapolis to Big Lake and bus rapid transit along Interstate 35W and Cedar Avenue south of the city. Plans for a Southwest Corridor light-rail line from Minneapolis to Eden Prairie appear to be high on the list of what’s next.

Meanwhile, MPR, two churches, people who depend on the #50 and #16 buses for daily transportation, and businesses up and down University Avenue in St. Paul continue to protest that LRT plans will leave them without sufficient bus service, without parking spaces for customers, without access for handicapped churchgoers and hearses, and with an excess of noise and vibration.

In November, the Strib interviewed the pastor of Central Presbyterian:

Colby is worried that vibrations will affect his building’s foundation and the domed ceiling over its 1,100-seat sanctuary. The fact that the rail tracks will seal off his church’s access to Cedar Street is another major concern. No hearses will be allowed to park out front for funerals, and the driveway that allows handicapped members to park or be dropped off next to a wheelchair-accessible entrance will be closed.”

and the pastor of the Church of St. Louis:

Next door to Colby’s church is the Church of St. Louis, King of France, which was designed by the architect of both the Cathedral of St. Paul and the Basilica of St. Mary in Minneapolis. The building, which will celebrate its centennial next year, has been meticulously restored in the past couple of decades, and a new, million-dollar organ was installed in 1998.
Had the Central Corridor route been definite at that time, “the organ would have been designed quite differently,” said the Rev. Paul Morrissey, who has been at the church since 1985 and pastor since 1988. As things are now, he said, “the constant vibrations from the train would cause the organ to be permanently out of tune.” A retrofit is possible, at a cost of $100,000, he said. It’s not clear who would pay.

Morrissey also notes that the loss of parking in front of the church during daily masses “would be a blow to the church’s predominantly elderly membership.”

Since MPR and the University of Minnesota, both with concerns about vibration and noise, are big players, the Central Corridor Project produced a new study in January. The Strib reported that, predictably, the Central Corridor Project-produced “216-page report shows vibration concerns can be resolved in every case.” Also predictably, the report failed to convince the U of M laboratories that will be impacted by the trains or MPR and the churches.

Responses to small businesses faced with years of construction and complete loss of on-street parking, and to people whose bus transportation will be slashed, replaced only by LRT stations spaced a mile apart in poor neighborhoods, has been less than satisfactory to both constituencies. Central Corridor Project promises to put in some kind of infrastructure to make it possible — at some undetermined future date when there is enough money — to add three more stations to serve lower-income communities better. The response to businesses along University Avenue has been more along the lines of “we hear your concerns.”

The Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder summarized concerns of University Avenue area residents:

The train will stop 15 times as it journeys between St. Paul and Minneapolis. But, in an area where more than 40 percent of the population doesn’t own cars and depends on bikes and physical ability to get to bus stations, a light-rail stop every mile or so isn’t enough, according to neighbors.

In response to this issue, the Met Council has proposed including the infrastructure of three additional stops during construction. If enough funding is allocated, the extra stops will be added.
Minority business owners are especially concerned that their businesses will not be able to withstand the loss of customers during and after the construction process. Parking spaces will be lost to make room for the rail line on University Avenue. Snow removal will be challenging; there will be less room for the snow at the curbside, since lanes for traffic and a lane for the train will have to be accommodated.

The Twn Cities Daily Planet noted that older residents draw parallels between the destruction of the African American Rondo community in the 1960s and today’s light rail plan:

Dennis Presley Sr., 58, recalled the last major transportation project in this area. In the 1960s, Presley watched Interstate 94 slice through the heart of the Rondo neighborhood. The construction decimated Saint Paul’s vibrant, tight-knit, African American community. He saw many of the businesses shut down and families, including his own, displaced. Presley believes approving the current light-rail proposal will result in the same devastation and lead to the disenfranchisement of people of color again. “Will the light rail do that again to our neighborhood? I think so, no matter what our government says. I’m not happy with this at all.”

To all of its critics, the Central Corridor Project (and Met Council) have two standard responses, roughly summarized as:

Response #1: “We hear you and we will take your concerns seriously, (but not seriously enough to make any changes in the master plan.)”

Response #2: “The plan is too far advanced for changes at this stage, and we have been working on it for years and listening to all concerned parties, and everything will be fine.” (See Response #1.)

As the Central Corridor train rolls inexorably toward construction, University Avenue businesses continue to seek strategies for survival. The University Avenue Business Association is sponsoring a survey and meetings to “learn more and give your input about seeking financial assistance for small businesses to manage Light Rail construction” (January 15) and to “Explore your ideas and others for retaining more street parking and calling for action to keep small businesses in business. Your time will result in recommendations to change the current plans of eliminating 85% of the street parking that serves our businesses and residents on University Avenue today.” (January 29).

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News Day: January 12

Franken and Coleman: Together at last As reported in the Strib this morning, backers of Israel’s war on Gaza and opponents both staged events at the Minneapolis JCC yesterday. The Strib reported about 750 inside (supporting the war) and about 250 outside (opposing the war). Supporters included both Norm Coleman and Al Franken, finally finding something they could agree on, and a line-up of other MN politicos, beginning with T-Paw. As the Minnesota Independent reported last week, only Reps. Keith Ellison and Betty McCollum resisted the Congressional tidal wave of support for the war.

Opponents include Jewish, Palestinian, and other voices.

Hybrids ahead! Toyota plans to start selling its new hybrid plug-in car later this year, according to the NYT. The car will be made in Japan, powered by lithium-ion batteries, and sold to fleets, rather than to the general public, which will give them a year to monitor performance and usage and make changes before Chevy starts selling its Volt late in 2010. I want one — but price point and repair records are major considerations, so it will be a while.

How to stimulate an economy The Progressive offers this chart showing the most effective ways to spend economic stimulus money. Top three: food stamps, extending Unemployment Insurance benefits, and infrastructure spending. Bottom three: corporate tax cuts, extending Bush tax cuts, and accelerated depreciation.

That pretty much follows the economic analysis I’ve been reading, which all points to spending on jobs as the most effective use of economic stimulus funds, NOT tax cuts. (See Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, for example.) The Progressive‘s chart comes from Mark Zandi, a McCain economic adviser — hardly a radical. Bob Herbert advises:

And the way to create jobs is through infrastructure investments (building and repairing roads, bridges, tunnels and water and sewer systems); and by investing in 21st-century clean energy initiatives, in public transportation systems, and in school construction; and by providing access to health care for the millions who don’t have it.
In other words, by investing in the people and the enormous productive capacity of the United States.

In Minnesota, reports MPR, DFL legislators are talking about a state economic stimulus package. At this point, MPR says, Senate File 1 has only ” vague references to promoting a green economy, augmenting federal funds with state spending and bonding for public works projects, including roads, sewers, parks and trails. But no projects are listed, and the sections that appropriate money and authorizes bonding remain blank.” Republicans, predictably, point to the state’s $4.8 billion budget deficit and say the state can’t afford any economic stimulus spending. The difference is that capital projects are funded by borrowing through issuing state bonds. That means the spending is not part of the regular budget, which must be balanced each year, but instead is premised on future economic growth to pay off the bonds.

Press reports that gas prices are heading back up across the country. I can confirm the trend in the Twin Cities, as I paid $1.59/gallon to fill up less than a week ago, and today the same stations posted $1.85/gallon. Does anybody really believe that supply and demand control gas prices? Or that some combination of Russian-Ukrainian conflict and OPEC production cuts explain the increase? I know that a lot of experts pooh-pooh talk of manipulation of gas prices, but the roller-coaster of the past eight months has convinced me. I don’t understand why, and I don’t know who, but somebody is making money on this craziness.

MN Job Watch: The Strib reports that CostPlus is closing six Minnesota stores. And target=”_blank”>David Brauer reports that the Strib itself is about two weeks away from bankruptcy filing, though it’s not clear that will result in job losses on top of the already-large number that have been cut in the past year and a half. Finance and Commerce quotes the Associated General Contractors of America predicting a 30% cut in construction jobs ahead, but hoping that the economic stimulus package will change this grim prospect. According to Finance and Commerce:

Minnesota Democrat Jim Oberstar, chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, wants the plan to include $85 billion for transportation and public works construction.

The breakdown includes $32.5 billion for highways and bridges, $12 billion for mass transit, $14.275 billion for wastewater treatment facilities and other “environmental” projects, $5 billion for airports and $4.9 billion for passenger rail, among other projects, noted Oberstar spokesman John Schadl.

Oberstar wants the spending to be for projects that are ready to go within 120 days, all the better to quickly stimulate the economy.

Two Minnesota Republicans in Congress–John Kline and Michelle Bachmann–are warning that the economic stimulus plan must not include any earmarks, and “Bachmann referred to Obama’s stimulus plan as ‘a pork barrel’ package.”

Looks like jobseekers should head for McDonald’s, where profits are still rising, according to the NYT.

If you’re looking for a way to take your mind off the economy for a few hours, the Twin Cities Daily Planet recommends First Avenue’s best new bands of 2008, the Guthrie’s Dowling Studio for Henry V, and the West Bank’s Tam Tam African Restaurant. MPR recommends the month-long, first-ever International Chamber Orchestra Festival in St. Paul.

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News Day – January 9

“Shockingly awful” and “spectacularly grim” employment figures materialize, right on schedule. Today’s report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows unemployment in December running at 7.2%, and notes that, “Since the start of the recession in December 2007, the number of unemployed persons has grown by 3.6 million, and the unemployment rate has risen by 2.3 percentage points.” BBC notes that total job loss numbers for October and November have also been revised upward.

This week’s MN Job Watch: Some 500 employees in corporate HQ have taken Best Buy’s buyout offer. On the other side of the metro, Anderson Windows is cutting 50 jobs, and laying off another 400 employees. Alliant Tech/Federal Cartridge is eliminating 70-80 jobs, after cutting 40-50 in November. Macy’s will close its Brooklyn Center store, as well as cutting hours at the downtown St. Paul store.

The Strib reports that nursing homes are closing, and waiting lists growing, as reimbursement rates continue low. The state’s 393 nursing homes say they are losing $23 per day per resident at the current rates of state reimbursement. The state/federal Medicaid program pays for two-thirds of nursing home residents’ care.

John Judis in The New Republic and Paul Krugman in the New York Times both question whether the Obama economic agenda goes far enough in dealing with the nation’s crisis. Krugman:

This is the most dangerous economic crisis since the Great Depression, and it could all too easily turn into a prolonged slump.
But Mr. Obama’s prescription doesn’t live up to his diagnosis. The economic plan he’s offering isn’t as strong as his language about the economic threat.

For the full text of the Obama address on the economy, click here.

Meanwhile, in other news of the day:

Gran Torino has opened in the Twin Cities. The Twin Cities Daily Planet has a line-up of stories about the Minnesota and Hmong connections, written by both Daily Planet reporters and Hmong Today.

One RNC protester has pleaded guilty to the molotov cocktail charges. The other still awaits trial.

Minnesota salmonella cases make us one of the lucky states hit by the latest outbreak, with causes as yet undetermined.

“Your vote didn’t count.” That’s the message for about 400 voters, now receiving letters from the Secretary of State to tell them that either the Coleman or the Franken campaign challenged their absentee ballots and that the ballots consequently were not opened and counted.

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Coal ash from Tennessee to Minnesota

Bad as it was to hear about the coal ash sludge bursting out of its dam and destroying homes and rivers in Tennessee, at least the news seemed far away. Tennessee — they have coal mines there, don’t they? Or weak environmental laws? It’s a dreadful thing that happened, and we are sorry for those poor people and glad that we don’t have to worry about it up here.

Except that we do. I never heard of a coal ash dump until the disaster in Tennessee. Now I know that there are 1300 coal ash dumps spread all across the United States. Three of them are in Minnesota, with 18 to 50 foot high dikes holding in the coal ash in Becker, Cohasset and Hoyt Lakes. Like the other 1300 coal ash dumps, these three hold tons of coal ash sludge containing lead and mercury and other chemicals.

According to the New York Times,

Numerous studies have shown that the ash can leach toxic substances that can cause cancer, birth defects and other health problems in humans, and can decimate fish, bird and frog populations in and around ash dumps, causing developmental problems like tadpoles born without teeth, or fish with severe spinal deformities.

A 2007 Scientific American article notes that coal ash contains concentrated amounts of uranium and thorium, and says that “fly ash emitted by a power plant—a by-product from burning coal for electricity—carries into the surrounding environment 100 times more radiation than a nuclear power plant producing the same amount of energy.”

The Environmental Integrity Project on January 7 released a report saying that “the Stanton Energy Facility in Orlando, FL., has reported dumping roughly 10 times more of the carcinogen in its site between 2000-2006 than the TVA did over the same period in its now ruptured Harriman, TN storage pond site.” The EIP report listed other sites that are more contaminated than the Tennessee site.

Eric Schaeffer, director, Environmental Integrity Project, said: “The Tennessee eco-disaster has cast a spotlight on what is a very serious national problem – the existence of under-regulated toxic pollution coal dump sites near coal-fired power plants that pose a serious threat to drinking water supplies, rivers and streams. Our analysis confirms that this problem is truly national in scope and that Tennessee may end up only being a warning sign of much more trouble to come. In addition to so-called ‘surface impoundments’ in ponds, we need to be concerned about inadequate oversight and monitoring of land-based disposal and other ‘storage’ of these toxic wastes. We can no longer afford to ignore this problem and we certainly can’t be content to just sit around and wait for the next Tennessee-style disaster to happen.”

Minnesota regulatory agencies told the Star Tribune that these dams are safe, not like the one on the North Shore, which “crashed” down a hillside in July 1993 after a heavy rain. That dam, like the one in Tennessee, was made up in part of ash, while the three dams at Becker, Cohasset and Hoyt Lakes are entirely earthen.

Minnesota’s stringent rules call for inspection of coal ash dumps every eight years, though State Dam Engineer Jason Boyle told the Strib he couldn’t find inspection records for two of the three dams.

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News day – January 8

Downsizing the news, again and again and again. David Brauer has the full list of buyouts at the Strib, including columnist Kathy Kersten and online managing editor Will Tacy. Brauer reported earlier that the Strib has proposed paycuts of up to 42 percent for some Teamsters union workers. Cuts hit both WCCO and City Pages last week, and the Strib has followed the PiPress in combining both A and B sections in the Monday paper, with Business and Classifieds in a single section Monday-Thursday. (The PiPress combines both sections on Monday and Tuesday, and the Strib says its move is only a “test” during January. Right.) And the Minnesota Daily is cutting costs by going down to four issues each week when it resumes publication with the new term in January, and paying reporters per-story rather than per-hour, according to the Strib.

Journalism, with feeling. For old-style reporting in the teeth of danger, Palestinian journalists in Gaza are offering a couple of inspiring examples. JTA, the Jewish Telegraph calls AP writer Ibrahim Barzak, “the best reporter in Gaza,” describing his work in better days:

He is an assiduous, just the facts reporter. He never raises his voice and always asks the tough questions. He has risked his life more than once for his job, and more than once for pissing off the Palestinian powers that be.

Barzak begins his own account of reporting in Gaza this week:

I live alone in my office. My wife and two young children moved in with her father after our apartment was shattered. The neighborhood mosque, where I have prayed since I was a child, had its roof blown off. All the government buildings on my beat have been obliterated.
After days of Israeli shelling, the city and life I have known no longer exist.

I heard another moving interview with a Palestinian journalist Rami Al Meghari on KFAI radio Tuesday, from Pacifica’s Free Speech Radio News program. The podcast explores ” between his pull to ‘get the story’ as a journalist and his constant fear for his family and children.”

RNC? Which RNC? As Twitter follows the RNC (Republican National Commitee) chair candidates (Schmelzer: “Listening to RNC chair candidates speak. One guy: “It’s tough being a Young Republican.” Then glee answering how many guns each owns.”), the aftermath of St. Paul’s RNC drags on. Yesterday, the Strib reported that St. Paul and the Coalition to March on the RNC and Stop the War agreed to dismiss any claims against each other in federal court. Not sure what complaints the city had against the group, which staged the biggest march of the convention, staying within the lines on September 1, but the Coalition gave up its challenge to the city rules that kept them out of sight and hearing of all convention delegates. No legal protests were allowed to approach the RNC, except on the closed back side of the Xcel Center, and safely separated by a well-patrolled dead zone and tall double fences, leaving protesters free to shout slogans to one another.

The PiPress reported that police videos of St. Paul streets during the RNC are now available for public viewing–at least if “public” means filing legal demands under the Minnesota Data Practices Act, waiting for police permission, and then waiting your turn at the single video terminal available at the Western District police station.

Best/Worst Bush Moments Both local blogger Jeff Fecke and the august BBC offer lists of the “best” Bush moments. While Fecke’s Blog of the Moderate left includes some serious moments (Worst Bush Moments: #14, The Alito Appointment), the BBC article sticks to the silly side, noting that the “word ‘Bushism’ has been coined to label his occasional verbal lapses.” BBC offers video of some of the greatest moments, as well as several categories of quotations. Perhaps we should all be glad that, in the words of GWII, “I’ll be long gone before some smart person ever figures out what happened inside this Oval Office.” (5/12/08)

From the east and west side of the river St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman announced January 7 that he is running for re-election. As the incumbent Democratic mayor of a Democratic city with a 100% Democratic City Council, his chances for re-election look good.

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“Shockingly awful” and “spectacularly grim”

UPDATED JANUARY 9
“This is a terrible time to be a parent of young adult children,” my friend told me at lunch a few weeks ago. “You tell them to study hard and work hard to get ahead — and then when they graduate, there’s nothing.” A reader writing to the New York Times echoed her feelings: “We have GOT to get the twenty somethings jobs. The kids around here are getting really desperate, and they can’t even get into the classes they need at colleges right now with the budget cuts to universities.”

Friday morning update: Today’s report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows unemployment in December running at 7.2%, and notes that, “Since the start of the recession in December 2007, the number of unemployed persons has grown by 3.6 million, and the unemployment rate has risen by 2.3 percentage points.” BBC notes that total job loss numbers for October and November have also been revised upward.

All of the latest jobs figures confirm their concerns, with the bleakest jobs picture seen by anyone now under retirement age — more than 2.4 million jobs lost last year, unemployment continuing at 8-9 percent through 2010, and no prospect for even the beginning of a recovery for more than a year.

President-elect Obama spoke on the economy on January 8
“We start 2009 in the midst of a crisis unlike any we have seen in our lifetime, a crisis that has only deepened over the last few weeks. Nearly 2 million jobs have been now lost, and on Friday we’re likely to learn that we lost more jobs last year than at any time since World War II. Just in the past year, another 2.8 million Americans who want and need full-time work have had to settle for part-time jobs. Manufacturing has hit a 28-year low. Many businesses cannot borrow or make payroll. Many families cannot pay their bills or their mortgage. Many workers are watching their life savings disappear. And many, many Americans are both anxious and uncertain of what the future will hold.

“Now, I don’t believe it’s too late to change course, but it will be if we don’t take dramatic action as soon as possible. If nothing is done, this recession could linger for years. The unemployment rate could reach double digits. Our economy could fall $1 trillion short of its full capacity, which translates into more than $12,000 in lost income for a family of four. We could lose a generation of potential and promise, as more young Americans are forced to forgo dreams of college or the chance to train for the jobs of the future. And our nation could lose the competitive edge that has served as a foundation for our strength and our standing in the world.”

Click here for full text of President-elect Obama’s January 8 speech on the economy

The Labor Department released the December national unemployment figures on January 9, and they are not pretty. (Minnesota’s December numbers will be out on January 22.) NPR’s Planet Money blog quotes one expert who calls the prospects “shockingly awful,” and points to the ADP employment report dated January 7, which estimates that the nation lost 693,000 jobs in December. That’s the biggest drop in 59 years. ADP bases its reports on its experience as the payroll service provider for 400,000 employers with about 24 million employees.

Minnesota’s unemployment rate was 6.4 percent (seasonally adjusted) in November, according to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development. “This was the result of an increase of 14,400 unemployed people,” said the DEED website “which raised the total to 188,925, the highest number since early 1983.” Every sector except government lost jobs, and the increase in government jobs was “almost entirely due to election judges.” Statewide, initial unemployment claims in November “increased by 12,800 or 43.0 percent from one year ago to 42,600.”

Another one of the economic markers that the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) tracks is the number of mass lay-offs, defined as more than 50 unemployment claimants in a single month from a single company. November and December are typically high months for mass lay-offs, but the 60 reported in Minnesota in November 2008 were a significant increase from 41 reported in 2007. November’s 60 mass lay-offs yielded 5,442 new unemployment claimants in November (compared to 4,315 in November 2007), in addition to all those unfortunate workers laid off in smaller increments.

Nationwide, the BLS reported 2,574 mass lay-offs in November 2008, compared to 1,799 in November 2007. The Congressional Budget Office just issued its annual report,, which paints a grim picture that includes 2009 unemployment averaging 8.3 percent, increasing to 9 percent in 2010:

The sharp downturn in housing markets across the country, which undermined the solvency of major financial institutions and severely disrupted the functioning of financial markets, has led the United States into a recession that will probably be the longest and the deepest since World War II. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) anticipates that the recession—which began about a year ago—will last well into 2009.

Under an assumption that current laws and policies regarding federal spending and taxation remain the same, CBO forecasts the following:

• A marked contraction in the U.S. economy in calendar year 2009, with real (inflation-adjusted) gross domestic product (GDP) falling by 2.2 percent.

• A slow recovery in 2010, with real GDP growing by only 1.5 percent.

• An unemployment rate that will exceed 9 percent early in 2010.

Nobel-prize-winning economist Paul Krugman warns that the CBO estimates may be over-optimistic. He calls the jobs picture “spectacularly grim,” and says that the Obama plan is not enough, especially with “a significant share going to ineffective tax cuts.”

According to MSNBC:

Obama plans to propose $310 billion in tax cuts for the middle class and businesses as part of the $775 billion stimulus plan. Some U.S. governors and economists are pushing for a larger package—around $1 trillion. Many Republicans want a more modest bill, possibly in the range of $500 billion.

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News Day January 7

(Not) teaching English already? Education Week magazine finds that Minnesota lacks enough ESL teachers, the Strib reports, with a ratio of 49 students to each ESL teacher, compared to a national 19 to 1 average. That’s critical, since Minnesota’s ESL student population doubled, growing from 30,000 in 1995 to 61,000 in 2005, according to Education Commissioner Alice Seagren. In suburban Anoka-Hennepin, the state’s largest district, ESL enrollment has gone from 118 students 15 years ago to 3,200 today. In contrast to today’s push for all immigrants to learn English yesterday, the Hispanic Fanatic notes a recent University of Wisconsin study showing that a century ago “many immigrants felt no need to learn English at all, much less quickly, and that some of them, in the words of the researchers, ‘appeared to live and thrive for decades while speaking exclusively German.'”

Kudos to MinnPost for adding a DC correspondent, Cynthia Dizikes. That makes two for MN, with the other spot occupied by the Strib’s Kevin Diaz. Minnesota may have only one senator at the moment, but we have eight congressional reps, and now two whole reporters to cover the crowd.

Maybe we should move to NoDak. MPR reports that North Dakota has a $1.2 billion budget surplus and Governor John Hoeven is planning both tax cuts and increased state spending. (He also wants to keep a budget reserve of at least $600 million, noting that the state is not immune to the national economic recession.)

Okay to discriminate. The Minnesota Court of Appeals agreed that a lesbian couple raising two daughters can be denied family membership in a Rochester health club, reports the Strib. No gay marriage, no equal rights: 2009 repeats 2008 repeats 2007 …

“It’s a nightmare, dude.” Both the Strib and the PiPress devote major column inches to the Minnesota Fatal Attraction story of a former “female friend” who trashed her ex’s apartment, pouring paint over walls and into computer and toilet and even impaling his daughter’s teddy bear on a steak knife. The case should be easy to make — she posted photos on her MySpace account.

Their ex-prime minister trumps our president-elect. TPM has the Blair House answer we have been waiting for: King George Bush II said president-elect Obama and his family can’t stay in the official guest house while awaiting the inauguration (and getting daughters in school and naming cabinet members and handling the rest of the transition business) because, in the waning moments of the reign of George II, he is “hosting former Australian Prime Minister John Howard, and will be giving him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Fun fact about Howard: He is a staunch Iraq War supporter who said in early 2007 that if he were in al-Qaeda he would be praying as much as possible for an Obama victory and for the Democrats in general.”

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Alice in Soucheray-land

Legal experts say Coleman faces an uphill battle, according to MPR. Coleman lawyer Fritz Knaak says they intend to put local officials under oath and question them about what happened in local polling places in a process that he predicts will take at least two months. Coleman loyalists Joe Soucheray and the Wall Street Journal editorial page, also republished in the PiPress continue beating the drums with attacks on the recount and on Minnesota elections.

As MnIndy reports/repeats, the January 5 WSJ editorial is one “that nearly everyone but Rush Limbaugh has laughed off for its woolly inaccuracies and hidebound misrepresentations.”

Sooch faults SoS Ritchie and anyone else who was “encouraging more voting and making it sound virtuous and noble to do so.” He wants voting left to “the legitimate lot of us who vote correctly and responsibly” — and Republican-ly?

Sooch charges that Ritchie’s “eagle-eyed glare” intimidated two Republican-appointed Supreme Court justices into committing recount fraud as they joined in the unanimous rulings of the State Canvassing Board. Joe’s fans may include a girl named Alice, who proudly proclaimed “I can believe in three impossible things before breakfast.”

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Pig brains and politicians

An Austin man has sued Hormel over exposure to pig brains, reports the Strib. According to Dale Kinney’s legal filings, Hormel’s “process of using compressed air to harvest pig brains has led to a medical investigation involving the Mayo clinic, the Minnesota Department of Health, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).”

The Washington Post described the illness and its cause last year:

The ailment is characterized by sensations of burning, numbness and weakness in the arms and legs. For most, this is unpleasant but not disabling. For a few, however, the ailment has made walking difficult and work impossible. The symptoms have slowly lessened in severity, but in none of the sufferers has it disappeared completely.

While the illness is similar to some known conditions, it does not match any exactly. Nor is the leading theory of its cause something medical researchers have studied. That is because the illness appears to be caused by inhaling microscopic flecks of pig brain. …

[Investigators’] working hypothesis is that the harvesting technique — known as “blowing brains” on the floor — produces aerosols of brain matter. Once inhaled, the material prompts the immune system to produce antibodies that attack the pig brain compounds, but apparently also attack the body’s own nerve tissue because it is so similar.

Hormel says this plaintiff wasn’t an employee. Maybe he’ll have better luck than actual employees. As MPR previously reported, some immigrant workers have been denied workers’ compensation despite being diagnosed with an auto-immune disease that attacks the neurological system. The worker interviewed by MPR couldn’t get workers’ comp to even pay for the meds prescribed for her condition. And, yes, workers are entitled to workers’ compensation for injuries suffered on the job, regardless of whether they are citizens, permanent residents, or undocumented workers.

Of course, if you listen to Minnesota Employment Commissioner Steve Sviggum, no undocumented workers should get compensation for lost work time or for permanent injuries suffered in the course of their work. He wants to change workers’ compensation insurance laws to deny them coverage of anything but medical bills. Lose a hand? Out of luck. Permanent neurological damage? Go back to Mexico.

Rep. Carlos Mariani responded to Sviggum’s outrageous proposal:

If one follows this thinking to its logical conclusion, denying work comp to undocumented would encourage employers to hire undocumented workers because doing so would shield them from the expense incurred for making the worker whole when injured on the job. It would also reward the employer for having unsafe work conditions since they would not incur the cost that follows from those conditions. The savings in expenses: from full work comp costs, and from the expense of maintaining a safe work place could be substantive and could alter the societal balance that exists between protecting workers while running efficient industries. What is posed as an issue that only affects undocumented workers becomes a sector-altering dynamic that undermines organized labor, not to mention that it creates two competing social value systems operating in our economy. … It seems to me that if you want to end the employment of undocumented workers in our society, then making it easier for employers to not bear the work comp costs of injured workers achieves the opposite.

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News Day: January 6

Norm Coleman will sue to overturn the election results, despite calls from distinguished Minnesotans, including Democratic former V.P. Walter Mondale and Republican former governor Arne Carlson.

Twittering? Watch out for phishers, who have been trying to get e-mail contacts from Twitter users. Someone also hacked 33 Twitter accounts over the weekend, including Barack Obama and Britney Spears. According to BBC, the hackers promised free petrol from Mr. Obama and ” some very personal statistics from Ms Spears.”

Snow, ice, sledding and broken backs – that’s winter in Minnesota, according to the Hennepin County Medical Center. Docs say they’ve seen twice as many back injuries this year as last year. Icy hills made sledding more dangerous.

And the beat goes on — Alcoa cutting 115,200 employees, Toyota shutting down its Japanese plants for 11 days.

Here in MN, the PiPress reports that social services are seeing more need. In Sherburne County, “14 people called the county every day in 2008 for information about financial assistance. That’s up from an average of three calls a day in 2006.” December 1 saw an all-time one-day record of 625 calls for help.

NPR’s Planet Money asks “Where would we be if FDR had done nothing?” And over at NYT, Paul Krugman warns that Congress and the incoming Obama administration have to act quickly. “The fact is,” writes Krugman, “that recent economic numbers have been terrifying, not just in the United States but around the world. Manufacturing, in particular, is plunging everywhere. Banks aren’t lending; businesses and consumers aren’t spending. Let’s not mince words: This looks an awful lot like the beginning of a second Great Depression.”

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