MPR’s Dan Kraker writes the owners of the Silver Rapids Resort have asked a judge to withdraw permits to expand their resort in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness following a lawsuit from the state.
H. Jiahong Pan with Minnesota Reformer reports two of the five people who received an e-bike tax rebate earn more than $100,000 in income. “Meanwhile, just under 37% of the roughly 1,500 Minnesotans who received an e-bike tax rebate are low income, falling just short of the law’s 40% mandate, which was intended to give working people a chance at the ascendant transportation option.”
New York Times reports Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old arrested in connection to UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson’s death, is charged with two felonies and three misdemeanors related to “possession and use of a false ID and one relating to possession of an instrument of a crime.”
Zoe Jackson and Louis Krauss at the Star Tribune have all you need to know about Luigi Mangione, a person of interest arrested in connection to the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
KARE’s Felicity Dachel reports Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has vetoed a resolution passed by the city council that stands in solidarity with University of Minnesota students who occupied Morrill Hall earlier this fall in support of Palestine.
“This type of conduct is unacceptable and should not be condoned regardless of the issue. It appears that the Council has taken a position simply because it aligns with a cause they support, rather than the basic principles of law,” he wrote in a letter to the council.
Lauren Breunig with St. Cloud Live reports on the impact that program cuts are having on faculty at St. Cloud State University.
Related