Tag Archives: environment

News Day | Election results / Pop-up shops / Dinosaurs doing battle / Farmland conservation / Pawlenty shooting from the lip

ballot box graphicElection results Easy wins for most incumbents in the Twin Cities. The exceptions: St. Paul school board challenger Jean O’Connell, endorsed by the teachers’ union, was the second-highest vote-getter in the regular school board election, and incumbent Tom Goldstein loses his place on the board. Other winners – Elona Street-Stewart, John Brodrick, Vallay Varro.

In Minneapolis, Ward 4 council member Barb Johnson and Ward 5 council member Don Samuels won the highest number of votes, but not a majority. (Full listing of council races here.) The city’s new Ranked Choice Voting will decide who wins those races, but results won’t be known for a while. Because no federally-approved voting machines were available for the RCV voting, a hand count of ballots will be necessary.

RCV is coming to St. Paul next, as voters there approved the ballot measure adopting Ranked Choice Voting for municipal elections. Minneapolis had one ballot measure, proposing abolition of the Board of Estimate and Taxation – voters said no.

St. Paul results began coming in by 8:30 p.m. and were all in before 11 p.m. Minneapolis results didn’t start coming in until abter 9:30, as ballots were driven to the warehouse, but were all in by 11:30 p.m. Minneapolis voter turnout was 19.5 percent and St. Paul turnout was 21.6 percent.

Official results will take a while, because of necessity for hand-counting under Ranked Choice Voting — TC Daily Planet explains here. Hand counting will begin November 4 at 11 a.m. at the Minneapolis Elections Warehouse, 732A Harding St. NE.

Outside Minnesota

In two closely-watched gubernatorial races, both Virginia and New Jersey elected Republicans, despite strong support for the Democratic candidates by President Barack Obama.

In New York’s 23rd Congressional District, formerly a solid Republican district, Democratic underdog Bill Owens won — with some help from Minnesota Republicans Michele Bachmann and Tim Pawlenty. Bachmann and Pawlenty were among the Republicans who endorsed Conservative candidate Douglas Hoffman over Republican moderate Dede Scozzafava. This weekend, Scozzafava withdrew and endorsed Owens.

In Maine, opponents overturned a law allowing same-sex marriage in a referendum. Across the continent, Washington voters approved Referendum 71, upholding legislation that gives same sex couples legal rights as domestic partners.

Pop-up shops With retail vacancies high, reports the Star Tribune, malls are looking more favorably on “pop-up shops:” short-term leases, often with a focus on the holidays (think Spirit Halloween Superstores) or smaller, local businesses trying to see whether they can make it in the big time.

This year, Toys R’Us has opened 80 temporary stores across the country for the holiday shopping season. Some mall managers, aware of how vacant storefronts look to customers, are aggressively seeking more tenants:

“When you come to Burnsville Center, it looks like we’re 100 percent occupied because when a space goes dark, myself and my associates work hard to find temporary stores,” said Robbin Hahn, the mall’s general manager. Burnsville Center is about 95 percent full, she said.

Dinosaurs doing battle That’s the way Susie Fruncillo, one of the owners of Lake Country Booksellers in White Bear Lake, described the current best-seller price war to MinnPost. Target, Wal-Mart and Amazon.com are offering current best-sellers on-line for about $9, well below the cost of the books. Use of loss leaders may attract more book-buyers to the Big Three dinosaurs,” but it’s also riled up authors, indie booksellers and lots of other people who care about books, reading and writing.

“It doesn’t seem to be in anyone’s best interest to be heading toward a future where it may be impossible for writers to earn a living and where it’s difficult for publishers to exist,” said Martin Schmutterer, an assistant manager at Common Good Books in St. Paul.

Farmland conservation: not so much Millions of acres of fragile farmland, taken out of production and put into the Conservation Reserve Program, is now being returned to production, reports AP. The reason: a cap on farmland in the Conservation Reserve Program, imposed by the 2008 Farm Bill. That means no renewals when farmland’s CRP status runs out, removing 3.4 million acres from the program this fall.

The program pays landowners not to farm easily eroded land and helps cover the cost of establishing ground cover to reduce soil erosion and establish wildlife habitat.

Most of the land losing CRP protection this fall is in Texas, Kansas and Colorado, but AP reports that Minnesota has a total of 1.67 million acres protected under CRP, with 166,519 losing that protection in 2009, 80,259 in 2010, and 128,018 in 2011.

Shooting from the lip Republicans managed to lose New York’s Congressional District 23 race, by giving vocal support to the Conservative candidate over a moderate Republican – and ending up with a Democratic winner. Two of the Republicans involved were Minnesota’s own Michele Bachmann and Tim Pawlenty. Now T-Paw is shooting down another Republican, reports Minnesota Independent, calling for a litmus test to determine who the true Republicans are.

Senator Olympia Snowe, the lone Republican voting for the Senate health care plan in committee, came right back at him, with a defense of moderation.

But even if Pawlenty’s in trouble with Snowe, he can’t come near Michele Bachmann’s latest record-setting gaffe. David Brauer reports in MinnPost that she just got another “Liar, liar, pants on fire” rating from the Pulitzer Prize-winning PolitiFact:

For those of us keeping score, this is the seventh time Politifact has checked out a Bachmann claim, and the seventh time it’s been found false. Four of those seven have been rated “pants on fire” for high level of distortion.

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NEWS DAY | Coal loses, from Big Stone to Ashland / MN tops nation in civic participation / Two more reasons to go veggie / Visiting Burma

vote_thumbElections today! Today is the day! For information on where to find your polling place in Minnesota, click here. For information on Ranked Choice Voting in Minneapolis, click here. For articles about specific races, click here.

Coal loses, from Big Stone to Ashland The Star Tribune reports that developers of the $1.6 billion, coal-powered, Big Stone II power plant in South Dakota have abandoned the project. Continue reading

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NEWS DAY | Recession over! So is your job! / Police, property and punishment / Challenging Pawlenty’s cuts / Astroturfing in DC / Agreement in Honduras

jobs on a white background with a magnifierRecession is over! So is your job! I was wrong yesterday in questioning the accuracy of conflicting journalistic verdicts on the economy. Today everyone is on the same page. The GDP is growing! The recession is over! And even though Target announced that it will cut 85 jobs from its 1100-person marketing department in Bloomington, its spokesperson told MPR, ” “This is not a reflection on the current or anticipated economy.” I bet that makes the 85 people feel a whole lot better. Continue reading

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NEWS DAY | MPCA: Oops / H1N1 update / Atrazine on Halloween / Reporting on the economy

Hear No Evil , See No Evil , Speak No Evil

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MPCA: Oops The MPCA has apologized for issuing a gag order telling a Carver County Commissioner that he couldn’t talk about the problematic septic system at the Waconia Events Center. The Star Tribune reports that the apology came about a week after the gag order, and said, in part, “The letter of warning was not intended to limit your rights to vocalize concerns or comments, either publicly or privately.”

The MPCA, of course, has absolutely no legal authority to order anyone to stop talking about anything. As for “warning” someone about talking – same deal. As one comment in the Star Tribune suggests, “This should really raise a red flag. Does the MPCA need a shakeup in management to get back to it’s roots of pollution control?”

H1N1 update: Two schools closed, 266 hospitalized, 12 deaths New information released by the Minnesota Department of Health shows 266 people hospitalized last week and two more deaths, bringing the H1N1 deaths in MN to 12, according to the Pioneer Press. Some 288 schools reported flu outbreaks.

WCCO reported that St. Paul Academy and Summit High School are closed today because of flu, and students already have tomorrow off because of teacher conferences. Some 30 percent of their students are at home with the flu. Salem Lutheran in Stillwater also closed for the rest of the week because of flu.

The Star Tribune reports that 915 Minnesotans have been hospitalized with H1N1 complications since spring, including 655 since September 1, and that most of the hardest-hit patients between the ages of five and 18.

Atrazine on Halloween A Minnesota review of atrazine safety by the Minnesota Department of Agriculture, the state’s Department of Health, and the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is due out around Halloween, according to MinnPost. That’s a few weeks after the feds announced the beginning of a major review of the controversial pesticide.

In MinnPost, Will Souder explains:

Atrazine was first licensed in the United States in 1958, and for many years was the most heavily used pesticide in the world. It has also been one of the most frequently detected contaminants of water. Atrazine and its breakdown compounds have been found in lakes, streams, reservoirs, clouds, rain, snow, fog, and in water ready for human consumption from drinking-water systems in agricultural areas. …
The new EPA review follows media accounts of inadequate monitoring and regulation of community water systems and a damning report by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NDRC) last August that accused the agency of ignoring atrazine contamination in drinking water and in natural watersheds across the Midwest.

The European Union banned use of atrazine in 2003. Critics point to its persistence in drinking water and to spikes in atrazine presence in drinking water that are not measured well. They also argue that, whether or not atrazine is carcinogenic, it is linked ot various other problems, has been shown to cause deformities in frogs, and is an endocrine disruptor.

Economy up, economy down, and joblessness continues The economy “grew at a 3.5 percent pace in the third quarter, the best showing in two years,” signaling an end to the reccession, according to an AP report published in the Pioneer Press today. That’s good news, says the AP, despite the fact that joblessness is growing and wages are declining. But wait – another AP report published in the Star Tribune described “signs of a weaker housing market and a gloomier outlook on the economy” causing the stock market to slide.

Somehow economists and the media accept the end of a recession is measured in terms of “economic growth,” despite the fact that unemployment is still increasing. But even stranger is the seesaw reporting that has “a gloomy outlook” in one report and “the best showing in two years” in another.

Meanwhile, this morning’s figures from the Department of Labor show 530,000 new unemployment claims last week.

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NEWS DAY | St. Paul school board / Insurance denied: Too fat, too thin, too … raped? / more

tc_schoolhouseSt. Paul school board elections – a real contest? With the teachers’ union endorsing challenger Jean O’Connell, and refusing to endorse incumbents Elona Street-Stewart, John Brodrick, and Tom Goldstein, the school board race is shaping up to be a real fight, reports the Pioneer Press, despite the fact that no incumbent has lost in the past three election cycles. In addition to O’Connell, who is running as an independent with both union and chamber of commerce endorsements, two Republicans are also in the race — Chris Conner and John Krenik. Then there’s the separate race to fill the seat vacated by Tom Conlon, with DFL and union-endorsed Vallay Varro squaring off against Republican-endorsed Pat Igo.

The achievement gap between students of color and white students and budget issues are at the top of every candidate’s issues list. For more info, see:

John Brodrick (incumbent)
Chris Conner
Tom Goldstein (incumbent)
John Krenik
Jean O’Connell
Elona Street-Stewart

Pat Igo
Vallay Varro

Insurance denied: Too fat, too thin, too … raped? After Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert both went after insurance companies for denying coverage to a “fat” baby, UnitedHealth is now in the spotlight for denying coverage to a too-skinny, but healthy, two-year-old, according to the Star Tribune:

Aislin, who weighs 22 pounds, was turned down by UnitedHealth’s Golden Rule subsidiary for not meeting height and weight standards. Children who are considered to be too slight are often viewed as at higher risk for contracting an illness.

After Aislin’s family went on national television, UnitedHealth reversed its decision.

Another insurance company is taking some heat for denying coverage because of a woman’s medical treatment for rape, apparently another pre-existing condition. The Huffington Post Investigative Fund reported her story, and says it’s not the only one.

Meanwhile, Governor Tim Pawlenty, who believes in leaving health care insurance to the insurance companies and keeping the government out of it, is proposing a new interstate compact tolet health insurance companies sell across state lines. The PiPress quotes the Guv: “Our citizens will benefit from more robust competition, leading to increased choices and better values.”

And Paul Krugman reminds us that, when it comes to health care reform, “the facts have a liberal bias:”

Reform with a strong public option is cheaper than reform without — which means that as we get closer to really doing something, rhetoric about socialism fades out, and that $100 billion or so in projected savings starts to look awfully attractive.

Land of 10,000 (polluted?) lakes Environment Minnesota released a new report showing that more than two million tons of toxic chemicals were dumped into Minnesota lakes and rivers in 2007, part of 232 million tons of toxic chemicals dumped in waters across the country. Minnesota ranks 30th among the states in tonnage of toxic chemicals reported.

The full 44-page report, based on the federal government’s Toxic Release Inventory, notes that the TRI covers only industrial pollution, and does not include pollution from wastewater treatment plants, agricultural facilities or other sources.

Pollutant releases from factories, power plants and other industrial facilities are a key contributing factor to the pollution that leaves 46 percent of the nation’s assessed rivers and streams and 61 percent of its assessed lakes unsafe for fishing, swimming or other uses.

The report recommends encouraging the development and use of safer alternatives to toxic chemicals and strengthening enforcement of the Clean Water Act, expanding it to include “headwaters streams, intermittent waterways, isolated wetlands and other waterways for which jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act has been called into question as a result of recent court decisions.”

H1N1, but no shots Rather than the 120 million shots promised for October delivery, only 12.8 million were available by October 20, according to AP. Federal officials are now predicting 50 million doses by mid-November and 150 million in December. Adults need one shot, and children need two.

In a sign of how rapidly the virus is spreading, education officials said 198 schools in 15 states were closed Wednesday because of swine flu, with more than 65,000 students affected. That was up from 88 school closings the day before.

For Minnesota information, call the new Minnesota FluLine – 1-866-259-4655. Be prepared to wait – yesterday was the first day, and call volume was heavy.

R.T. for Dolan No surprise here.  Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak is backing Police Chief Tim Dolan for a second three-year term, reports the Star Tribune, citing an “unusually strong partnership.” After serving for six months as interim chief, Dolan was approved for the position in 2006 by a 12-1 council vote, with only councilmember Ralph Remington dissenting. Remington says he hasn’t changed his mind, but it’s unclear whether the next vote on Dolan will come before the end of the year, when Remington is retiring from the council:

[Remington] was troubled by allegations of institutional racism raised by five high-ranking black officers in a lawsuit, which the city settled for $740,000. Remington said Dolan also hasn’t been consistent in doling out discipline, an issue raised by the Police Federation. He criticized Dolan’s record on diversifying the department, though nearly 19 percent of the department are people of color, the most ever.

Dolan’s supporters point to double-digit decreases in violent crime over the past three years, and say he has disciplined more police officers than any other chief.

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NEWS DAY | Gangs in the news: MPCA gag order / Gang Strike Force claims / UnitedHealth profits up

<a href=MPCA issues gag order: What? Right, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has issued a gag order against a Carver County Commissioner after he showed — on camera — that their inspector’s report about a sewage system was wrong, wrong, wrong. How does the MPCA get the authority to issue a gag order? Not clear to me, or to Carver County Commissioner Tom Workman, according to the Star Tribune. Continue reading

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NEWS DAY | Crunching math scores / Wilder cutting jobs, programs / Going to the dogs / Pakistan attacks

Math_Symbol_ClipartCrunching the math scores Minnesota’s math scores remain above average for fourth and eighth graders, while national scores increased slightly for eighth graders and remained at the same level for fourth-graders, according to the national report released yesterday. Minnesota’s scores remained nearly the same as they were two years ago, with 54 percent of Minnesota fourth-graders showing proficiency.

Minnesota’s achievement gap remains large. MPR explains:

On the one hand, Minnesota’s black, Hispanic and American-Indian students all scored higher than the national average for each ethnic group….

On the other hand, Minnesota’s actual achievement gap is larger than the national average. While students of color regularly performed above the national average, so too did white students – which kept the gap large. The national achievement gap between white and black fourth-graders, for example, is 26 points. Minnesota’s gap is 28.

Wilder will cut 260 jobs The Wilder Foundation announced yesterday that it will cut 260 jobs, almost one-third of its 650-person work force, according to the Pioneer Press. The cuts come because of the recession’s impact, which slashed the value of the Wilder Foundation endowment.

Cuts will include:
• closure of residential treatment centers for troubled children and teens: Bush Memorial Children’s Center, Holcomb House and Spencer House;
• divesting from ownership of low-income housing in six buildings and ending management of low-income housing in an additional six buildings;
• closing the Home Health Agency (600 senior clients) and the Housekeeping and Homemaker service, which assists seniors.

With a $40.6 million budget in 2008, Wilder provided direct service to thousands of vulnerable people in the community; research that focused on community needs, accomplishments, and challenges; and a meeting place in its new building open to a wide variety of community events and organizations.

Wilder launched its first-ever capital campaign in 2005, opening its new headquarters at Lexington and University in 2008. The Second Century Capital Campaign came, according to Wilder’s annual report, “after 100 years of relying on funding its programs and services primarily from the Wilder family endowment established in 1906,” and was a signal that the foundation “needed support to continue its mission of serving the community’s most vulnerable citizens.”

Wilder Foundation CEO Tom Kingston was quoted in the Pioneer Press as saying that the new building does not contribute to the foundation’s current financial problems, but rather is “exactly on track with saving money,” and had actually improved cash flow.

News is going to the dogs And other animals.

Dog flu, aka H3N8, has spread to 30 states, according to Tampa Bay Online. WCBS in New York says that there is a vaccine, but that the mortality rate is low and the usual course is a couple of weeks of “coughing, high fever and runny noses.” The flu, first spotted at a greyhound track in Florida in 2004, is not related to H1N1, and is not contagious to humans. The new dog flu was originally a horse flu that went to the dogs.

Raising chickens in St. Paul will get cheaper, but not easier, reports the Pioneer Press. The city council lowered the permit fee from $72 to $27 but said prospective chicken owners will still need signatures from 75 percent of neighbors within 150 feet to get a permit, reports the Pioneer Press. And yes, roosters are still allowed.

• The Brits have created a fruit fly that is “sexually irresistible,” reports BBC.

A moose “calmly hung out in a Fargo, N.D., hotel courtyard for several hours Wednesday morning, munching on grass and leaves,” before being tranquilized and taken to a wildlife refuge, reports the Star Tribune.

On a more serious note, Ron Way’s excellent report in MinnPost yesterday asked whether the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) may finally be ready to enforce the law on large dairy and feedlot operations across the state. He notes the criticism arising from “excessive timidity by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) to deal with a problem that’s left several families and children sporadically inhaling “dangerous” hydrogen sulfide fumes over a two-year period,” and recites the history of MPCA delays in responding to complaints, and lax enforcement against super-sized feedlot operations.

That “history of bowing to agriculture, especially in environmental policy” should be familiar to everyone in the state by now, and there’s nothing in Way’s report to indicate that it is changing.

World/National news

Social Security – no increase this year For the first time since automatic cost-of-living increases were instituted in 1975, social security recipients will not get an increase this year. Because of the recession, inflation has flat-lined or even dipped to the negative side, so there will be no benefit adjustment.

Pakistan A series of attacks across the country today demonstrated the reach of Taliban and Al Qaeda factions and the inability of security forces to maintain zones of safety.

Teams of gunmen attacked three security sites in or near the eastern city of Lahore, reports NPR, “showing the militants are highly organized and able to carry out sophisticated, coordinated strikes against heavily fortified facilities despite stepped up security across the country.” The attacks began just after 9 a.m., and streets emptied as the city shut down.

In northwest Pakistan, a suicide car bomb exploded next to a police station in the Saddar area of Kohat, killing 11 people. Another bomb, near a school in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killed at least five people.

According to the BBC’s Orla Guerin in Lahore, “Thursday’s co-ordinated strikes appear to say to security forces “the more you come after us, the more we’ll go after you.”

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NEWS DAY | Republican ACORN feeding frenzy / Trash talking in St. Paul / Data Planet / Solar St. John’s

© Xavier - Fotolia.com

© Xavier - Fotolia.com

How many Republicans can dance on the head of an ACORN? Republicans continue to obsess over ACORN, with a passionate commitment that once informed theological debate over the number of angels that could dance on the head of a pin. Never mind the latest video footage, highlighted by Daily Kos,  “documenting that a shocking 63% of private sellers at gun shows tested were perfectly willing to sell to buyers who admitted up front that they probably couldn’t pass a background test.” MN Reps Michele Bachmann and John Kline and Fox’s Bill O’Reilly continue a pure and single-minded focus on ACORN.

Bachmann is now calling for appointment of a state inspector general to investigate ACORN contracts with Minnesota government — the best she can do, since there are no current contracts. In fact, reports AP, the last government contract with ACORN was for the grandiose amount of $7500 for foreclosure prevention work in 2008, and the grand total of Minnesota contracts with ACORN from 1996-2008 was $109,000 — not quite enough to pay minimum wage for a single half-time worker over that time period.

Bachmann also tweeted — twice — about a Washington Times story alleging that FEMA got a million dollars in fire prevention funds since the federal ban. Both the Washington Times and Bachmann are just plain wrong, report Politico and the Minnesota Independent, noting that the last payment under the FEMA contract came before the ban was imposed, and that the Bush Administration contracted with FEMA for fire prevention in poor communities in 2007.

Rep. John Kline has also demanded a “full airing” of all past and present connections between ACORN and any federal agency, according to MinnPost.

Fox’s Bill O’Reilly is demanding that Governor Pawlenty “look into possible fraudulent ACORN voter registrations as a factor in Sen. Al Franken’s narrow election victory over Norm Coleman.” MinnPost points out that there is absolutely no evidence to support his allegations.

It seems likely that the various (and duplicative) investigations into ACORN will cost more than the government contracts awarded to the organization. Back to Daily Kos:

Fake pimps. Fake “hos.” Fake “brothels.”

Real guns. Real crimes.

You tell me which one deserves time on the TeeVee, and a stampede to the floor of the House and Senate with new legislation in hand.

Trash talking gets ugly Debates over imposing city control of garbage hauling get heated and ugly in short order in cities with multiple trash haulers, such as St. Paul. But “open” trash hauling can get ugly, too, reports the Star Tribune:

Each week, at least five trucks rumble past to collect trash in their Fridley neighborhood. They show up as early as 6:40 a.m., waking the retirees.

Bill Simms, 67, doesn’t understand why his community needs so many haulers when people in next-door Columbia Heights get by with just one. And he’s furious he has to pay to fix streets worn down by all that tonnage. “I’m fed up,” Simms said.

Now an MPCA study finds that people in cities with multiple, competing garbage haulers pay more for their garbage collection, in addition to putting up with multiple garbage trucks rumbling down their alleys. Some St. Paul neighborhoods have organized to use a single hauler and enjoy less truck traffic and lower garbage rates. The St. Paul city council will take up the question, perhaps as soon as this month, and garbage haulers are already organizing to oppose any change in the system. Look for a major battle, despite the MPCA report’s findings that “St. Paul residents pay millions more than people in cities with organized garbage systems.”

Calling all information junkies The Pioneer Press has just relaunched Data Planet, and it’s looking good, despite a few techno-glitches in the search function. Data Planet offers info on crime, health care, real estate, business, education, public employee salaries, politics and elections, and “general interest.”

You can find the names of everyone booked into Hennepin or Ramsey County jail on a given date, or search for defendants by name. Hennepin County records are already publicly accessible online, but Ramsey County records are not, so Data Planet’s compilation is a real service.

You can check Minnesota school or nursing home report cards.

Money is always of interest: public employee salaries are public records, and they’re all available. You can also find out what MN executive makes the most money (Target’s Gregg Steinhafel last year, with a cool $13,453,024.)

Data Planet says the most popular baby names in Minnesota last year were Jacob and Emma.

Whether you are doing serious research, or looking for fun facts for Facebook posts, Data Planet is a great place to visit.

Solar power goes giant at St. John’s The state’s biggest-by-far solar farm will start pumping power during the shortest days of the year at St. John’s University in Collegeville, reports MPR. That’s a December launch for 1,820 solar panels in 35 rows on four acres of farmland, producing enough power for about 65 homes — or four percent of SJU’s total power needs. The purpose is educational and experimental as well as power-producing, with moving panels tracking the sun. According to a the manager of Westwood Renewables, an Eden-Prairie based design and engineering consulting firm, solar works more efficiently in cooler temperatures:

“So if you take this solar system and put it in New Mexico, on the same sunny day, it will actually produce more in Minnesota because of the cooler temperatures than it will on a hot day in New Mexico.”

That’s because electronics generally work better in cooler temperatures. Franzen and Monesterio said they hope the project will dispel myths about solar energy and prove that it’s viable in the state.

St. John’s University connects the solar installation to its theological commitments:

The Benedictine tradition at Saint John’s Abbey advocates a strong commitment to good stewardship of its resources. Incorporating solar energy to the campus’s energy sources is the first major step in the Abbey’s initiative to broaden and strengthen the monastic community’s commitment to green energy-and to education.

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NEWS DAY | Your zip code and your health / MN banks / H1N1 / Afghanistan

stethescope_morguefileYour zip code and your health “Social determinants,” including education, income, race and even where you live affect your health, reports MPR. According to Camara Jones, research director on social determinants of health and equity at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta:

“There are tremendous differences in every single health outcome you look at whether it’s an infectious disease, whether it’s heart disease, whether it’s cancer, whatever, education is a tremendous predictor of health outcomes.”

Better health outcomes are also tied to higher income. And, reports Paul Matessich of the Wilder Institute, the zip coding of health is demonstrated right here in the Twin Cities:

“If you live in certain ZIP codes in the Twin Cities you will live five, seven or eight years less,” said Paul Mattessich, executive director of Wilder Research in St. Paul. “Or say it more dramatically, you will die five, seven or eight years sooner than people who live in other zip codes because of the different community factors.”

The community factors he’s talking about are social determinants of health — things like crime, pollution, the quality of housing, access to full-service grocery stores, jobs and recreation. The presence or absence of any of these conditions can have an enormous effect on health behaviors in a neighborhood.

When Allina Hospitals started the Backyard Project to improve the health of the neighborhoods around the hospitals — Powderhorn, Phillips, Central and Corcoran  — they found that social determinants were at the top of people’s lists of things that affected their health:

“We hear a lot about jobs, we hear about housing, we hear about school, we hear about safe environments for kids to be able to play, about having access to and being able to afford healthy foods, stress, just a lot of the challenges of daily life that really do have a profound impact on a person’s health,” Zuehlke said.

One participant noted that, while he tried to get his family to eat healthier foods, that cost more than 99 cent burgers at McDonalds. A second installment in the MPR series on health and environment focused on availabiilty of healthy food, noting that “poor people, and people of color, often live in neighborhoods without full-service grocery stores.”

The Wilder Foundation’s Compass Project research has zeroed in on disparities, including disparities in health, within the seven-county metro area. Recently, a legislative hearing and a community roundtable with Senator Al Franken have also focused on racial disparities in health and health care.

The legislative hearing circled around to another of the social determinants of health with the testimony of State Demographer Tom Gillaspy:

Gillaspy testified that recent trends show Minnesota’s poverty rate increasing along with the U.S. rate, although Minnesota’s poverty rate of 9.6 percent remains lower than the 13.2 percent national average. Gillaspy said that between 2007 and 2008, the state’s poverty rate increased by 1.9 percent, and added that the rate of people at 100 to 150 percent of the poverty level also went up by 10.1 percent.
Gillaspy said the statistics that are currently available are “frustrating” in that they do not reflect the massive economic changes that have occurred since 2008.

Who’s watching MN banks? The MN Commerce Commission watches Minnesota banks, and right now about one in five state-regulated banks and credit unions are on its watch list, reports AP. That’s 71 banks and 21 credit unions, if you’re counting. Four MN banks have gone under this year, the highest number since 1990. Nationally, 98 banks have failed and 416 are “problems.”

The Star Tribune reports troubling testimony before a legislative committee hearing yesterday. According to James LaPierre, regional director for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation:

Minnesota banks have just 61 cents of cash reserves on hand to cover every dollar in problem loans, down from 81 cents a year ago. Regulators recommend that banks keep at least as much cash in reserves as they have problem loans.

Joe Witt, president of the Minnesota Bankers Association, said MN banks are actually doing well, with 333 making a profit in the second quarter. He said that problem loans come not just from “risky lending,” but more from the national economic recession.

Needle or nasal spray, vaccine is on the way The H1N1 nasal spray — some 2.2 million doses — was released in some states on Monday, reports AP, and the shots will be on their way next week. Meanwhile, a shortage of seasonal flu vaccine has caused the cancellation of two more flu shot clinics at the University of Minnesota. Despite earlier promises, a manufacturer said it could not deliver 14,000 doses of the seasonal flu vaccine this week, as originally promised.

According to the flu.gov website, Minnesota has ordered doses of the nasal spray, but the MN Department of Health website has no information on availability.

Chamber strikes out When the U.S. Chamber of Commerce continued to oppose cap-and-trade and other climate change measures, Apple left. Three big utilities — PG&E, Exelon and PNM Resources — had already left, for the same reason, and Nike resigned from the board of directors.

The departures weaken the Chamber’s influence in Washington. NPR summarizes:

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce bills itself as “the voice of business.” But when it comes to climate change, business no longer speaks with one voice.

But, notes NPR, the Chamber still has three million members and spent nearly $92 million on lobbying last year.

Afghanistan President Obama told a group of Congressional leaders that he will not propose a major troop cut in Afghanistan, but that he has not yet decided whether to ask for more troops, reported the New York Times. The Washington Post noted “bi-partisan concerns over strategy” – big surprise there.

Icasualties, a website tracking U.S. and coalition deaths in Afghanistan, shows the acceleration of deaths in the past two years. Keep in mind that the 2009 numbers are year-to-date, and there are still almost three months left in the year.

Picture 4

And the most recent (mid-September) CNN poll shows Americans opposed to the war, by a 58  to 39 percent margin. In Minnesota, anti-war activists will mark the eighth anniversary of the war at the weekly peace vigil on the Lake Street bridge Wednesday.

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NEWS DAY | MN says no to T-Paw for Prez / Xcel rate hike-cut / Paying for dirty water

Tim PawlentyT-Paw for Prez? MN says no A recent Minnesota Poll showed that Minnesotans wouldn’t vote for Governor Tim Pawlenty for president, reports Politico. Only 25 percent said that T-Paw definitely has their votes, while 43 percent said there’s no way they would vote for T-Paw for president, and another 25 percent allowed as how there might be some chance that they’d vote for him. Continue reading

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