Author: Minnesota Reformer

Advertisement
Ad for EPLN Email Newsletter
Advertisement
EPLN Ad for Give To The Max

State Sen. Kelly Morrison (DFL-45, Deephaven) formally launched her campaign for Minnesota’s 3rd Congressional District Sunday evening during an event featuring former two-term Gov. Mark Dayton. Morrison, a practicing OB-GYN, is running for U.S. Rep. Dean Phillips’ seat. Phillips is in the middle of his longshot campaign for president, and last month he announced he would not seek reelection for a fourth term in 2024. Former Minneapolis city official Ron Harris is also running for the Democratic nomination in the 3rd District. Morrison told a crowd of supporters at a Minnetonka brewery that she’s running for Congress to expand progress that Minnesota…

Read More

A contingent of DFL lawmakers plan to introduce legislation next year capping child care costs at 7% of household income for all families making less than 150% of the state median income. For example, a family of four making less than $176,000 per year would spend no more than $12,320 on child care in a year. Minnesota has some of the highest child care costs in the country — families currently spend around 20% of their income on child care. The average cost of infant child care in Minnesota is more than $16,000 per year. The program would build on existing child care subsidies,…

Read More

Gov. Tim Walz issued the first veto of his entire tenure on Thursday, striking down a bill that would have set minimum pay rates for Uber and Lyft drivers and provide them greater protection against being fired. Walz’s office announced the veto hours after Uber said it would pull out of greater Minnesota and only provide “premium services” in the Twin Cities metropolitan area if the governor signed the bill into law. In the same email announcing the veto, the governor said he issued an executive order to convene a working group — including drivers, riders, and transportation network companies — to make…

Read More

Gov. Tim Walz signed a bill into law (HF3) Friday that aims to expand and simplify voting and create more transparency around campaign money, among other provisions. The new law includes automatic voter registration, allows 16- and 17-year-olds to pre-register to vote and allows voters to choose to vote by mail permanently by getting on a permanent absentee ballot list. Another provision will require more reporting of who’s behind political ads. The new law is just the latest in a fusillade of progressive legislation Walz has signed after passage by the Democratic-controlled Legislature: This week, lawmakers took action on the following: You…

Read More

Taylor Daiello knew it was time to quit her job last year after she crashed into a car on her way home from work. She was coming off a 12-hour shift as a charge nurse, responsible for overseeing her department. She had left the hospital just before midnight. There were hardly any cars on the road. But Daiello was drained, and her mind was blank. “I was just in that fight-or-flight-like trauma response,” she recalled. Daiello has a heart for helping others. She also loves being challenged by science and enjoys the fast-paced, unpredictable nature of nursing. But on Nov.…

Read More

Gov. Tim Walz and legislative leaders agreed this week to spend nearly all of the state’s $17.5 billion budget surplus, with the largest amount of new money going to tax credits and cuts, infrastructure projects and K-12 education. Using almost all of Minnesota’s surplus over the next biennium propels spending for fiscal years 2024-25 to $72 billion, with about $2.8 billion set aside for reserves. Confusingly: The $3 billion Walz and legislative leaders have set aside for tax cuts and credits counts as “spending.” Also, aid to local governments will be part of that $3 billion. The budget agreement means lawmakers…

Read More

Gov. Tim Walz on Friday signed a bill to provide free breakfast and lunch to all Minnesota students at eligible schools. Walz signed the bill surrounded by lawmakers, community advocates and young students at Webster Elementary School in northeast Minneapolis. The second-term DFL governor lauded how universal meals will help make Minnesota the best state in the country to raise a child — one of Walz’s key budget priorities. “This bill puts us one step closer to making Minnesota the best state for kids to grow up, and I am grateful to all of the legislators and advocates for making…

Read More

The story of Ticketmaster looks a lot like a tragedy now. A Minnesota House committee advanced a bill on Monday to increase transparency around ticket prices after Ticketmaster bungled ticket selling for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, leaving millions of Swift fans — known as Swifties — without tickets after waiting in a virtual queue for hours. The bill, aptly named HF1989 after Swift’s celebrated album 1989, would require upfront pricing for all fees and charges, while also preventing “double-dipping,” or when fees are charged every time a ticket is sold and then resold by the same company. The bill also regulates ticket resellers by preventing them from…

Read More

The Minnesota House on Monday passed a bill (HF30) with broad support, 113-5, to crack down on catalytic converter thefts. The companion bill is still making its way through the state Senate. Minnesota is one of the worst states for catalytic converter thefts in the United States. Thefts have skyrocketed in recent years: Nationally, the National Insurance Crime Bureau estimates that thefts increased by 1,215% between 2019 and 2022. Last year, Minnesota was part of a nationwide catalytic converter theft ring bust. The bill’s been around for several years but never got a hearing in the GOP-held Senate. Former GOP Senate Majority Leader Jeremy Miller owns a…

Read More