Category Archives: St. Paul Notes

Ear plugs in: This is what recycling looks like

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The finished product from the Materials Recycling Facility (MRF): bales of paper, plastic, cans. 

It’s noisy in here. Crashing, clashing, grinding, headache-inducing noisy — and that’s with earplugs in. Not only earplugs: for this visit to Eureka’s Materials Recycling Facility (MRF), I’m also outfitted with a safety vest, plastic goggles, and protective hard hat. Watching a big, yellow front-end loader move across the floor toward us, I’m glad that I also have an earpiece and transmitter so I can follow the directions given by my guide, Lynn Hoffman, Eureka’s chief of community engagement. Continue reading

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For José Hernandez, recycling is more than a job

IMG_6114Outside the glass windows of the office, the incessant clatter and clashing of the Eureka Recycling‘s Materials Recycling Facility (MRF) continues nonstop. Inside, I extract the protective plugs from my ears, and sit down to talk to José Hernandez about his work at Eureka Recycling. Continue reading

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Eight to eighty?

IMG_6137Look at the photo above. This is a bus stop. In St. Paul, a city committed to “creating safe, pleasant, lively streets and public spaces that work for everyone from eight to eighty.” If you are eight years old, will you be secure climbing over the snow to the bus? If you are eighty, will you be secure walking a block over the unplowed, unshoveled side of the street to get to the bus? Continue reading

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Snowstorm coming: Watch out for St. Paul alleys

snowman closeup.pngIt’s coming. Paul Huttner says so.

“It’s way too early to pinpoint specific storm tracks and inches, but it’s worth saying there is the potential for several inches of snow somewhere across southern and central Minnesota by Monday night. … what could be a significant slop storm with heavy wet snowfall accumulations from late Monday afternoon into Tuesday morning.”

That means sidewalk shoveling and snow emergencies, and that most intractable of St. Paul snow problems: unplowed alleys clogging with snow or turning to icy, impassable ruts.

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Change must come to St. Paul schools

Steve Marchese and Zuki Ellis are two of the Caucus for Change candidates for St. Paul's school board.

Steve Marchese and Zuki Ellis are two of the Caucus for Change candidates for St. Paul’s school board.

St. Paul Public Schools (SPPS) will have at least three and possibly four new members after the November 2 election. So who are you voting for? And will that make a change?  Continue reading

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Good news: Growing communities and gardens

Monarchs loved the bright red zinnias in the Merriam Station Community Garden

Monarchs loved the bright red zinnias in the Merriam Station Community Garden

Monarchs fluttered through the giant red zinnias during the Merriam Station Community Garden Day. A few people listened to the program as I wandered through the gardens, snapping photos of pumpkins and flowers. Some 70 well-tended garden plots occupy this spot, a block north of I-94 and not many blocks east of my home. Volunteers run the sign-up and clean-up details for the community garden. People grow vegetables and flowers in their individual plots, and also donate food to Keystone Midway Food Shelf, both from individual plots and from a plot dedicated to producing for the food shelf. Continue reading

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“Those people” are our neighbors

Sue Swain speaking at NAMI press conference. Also pictured, Sue Abderholden and Jill Wiedemann-WEst

Sue Swain speaking at NAMI press conference. Also pictured, Sue Abderholden and Jill Wiedemann-WEst

“In February 2009, I was desperate,” Sue Swain said. “My life was out of control and I needed help.” Already stressed by work and being a family caregiver, she now had to contend with a cancer diagnosis. The combination was too much to handle. But Swain found help at the Diane Ahrens crisis residence. During three days there, she ate nourishing meals, got help with managing prescriptions, and found counseling to deal with her burdens. Her short stay at the crisis residence, she says, was the “first and most critical step on my path to wellness.”
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St. Paul soccer wars: Council will vote Wednesday

Photo by m01229, Published under Creative Commons license.

Really?  [Photo by m01229, Published under Creative Commons license.]

On Wednesday, August 26, the St. Paul City Council will vote on a resolution “Supporting Major League Soccer in the City of Saint Paul.” Major League Soccer thinks Minnesota is ready for the big time. Or maybe MLS thinks the Twin Cities are fat pigeons, ready for plucking, since we have already subsidized stadiums for other sports millionaires. MLS and the Minnesota United owners’ group led by Bill McGuire want public subsidies. While Minneapolis has said no, St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman wants the stadium and Hennepin County Commissioners are pushing for a Minneapolis deal. We’ll see how the St. Paul city council votes. Continue reading

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St. Paul school board turns off television coverage of public comments

Parent speaking during public comment time at August 18 board meeting.

Parent speaking during public comment time at August 18 board meeting.

The St. Paul school board voted Tuesday to shut off television coverage of public comment, ending a decades-long tradition. Until now, the St. Paul school board televised its meetings, including the public comment time when regular people get to say what they think about the schools. The public comment time was part of the board’s regular agenda. No more — now public comments will no longer be televised and the comment section will come before the meeting, rather than as a part of the agenda. Continue reading

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St. Paul school board candidates off and running

Steve Marchese and Zuki Ellis are two of the candidates in a field of nine. Others: Jon Schumacher, Mary Vanderwert, Keith Hardy, Scott Raskiewicz, Aaron Benner, Greg Copeland and Linda Freeman.

Steve Marchese and Zuki Ellis are two of the candidates in a field of nine. Others: Jon Schumacher, Mary Vanderwert, Keith Hardy, Scott Raskiewicz, Aaron Benner, Greg Copeland and Linda Freeman.

With filing now closed, St. Paul school board candidates include one who eschews social media and another inspired by “The Untouchables.” The five most serious candidates are DFL-endorsed Zuki Ellis, Jon Schumacher, Steve Marchese, and Mary Vanderwert, all of whom identify with the teachers-union-backed Caucus for Change, and school board incumbent Keith Hardy, who is running without endorsement. The four who are elected in November will deal continuing problems, including student achievement, discipline and budgets, as well as middle school students leaving the district.

Zuki Ellis has deep connections to St. Paul Public Schools, as an alum of Webster Elementary and Highland Park Senior High School, and the mother of three SPPS students. Her web page lists detailed and thoughtful positions on key issues from the botched mainstreaming initiative rolled out a couple of years ago to iPads in classrooms and corporate talk in the district office. On mainstreaming:

“For both Special Education and ELL students, the word ‘mainstreaming’ has been used to disguise blatant neglect for individual student progress, and I cannot support the way it has been carried out.

“By cutting entire programs for the sake of ‘mainstreaming’ students, without any regard for the needs of individual students, the district has shown a total disregard for those students’ potential to succeed.  (They’re called Individual Education Plans for a reason.) “By providing additional support staff in the classroom, we can make steps toward making sure students are still getting the individual attention they need and deserve, and that our teachers are able to fully address the needs of all students.”

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