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What's the right answer for trails and Mississippi Overlook Park?

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What's the right answer for trails and Mississippi Overlook Park?


BAXTER — A question before the Baxter City Council is if the city could take advantage of a grant opportunity for its Mississippi Overlook Park or if the current timing means waiting to see if future grant dollars may be present.

The park’s 60 acres and the 820 acres next to it are city-owned property in southwest Baxter available to the public, but getting to the park overlooking the river and its shoreline facilities means walking a half-mile or a mile distance after parking on a dead-end residential street.

A grant opportunity was presented to the city that could create an access road and parking lot much closer to park facilities, extend water and sanitary sewer and add a trail system for the Mississippi Overlook Park and the additional acres in southwest Baxter. A trail system, with Sylvan Township and Baxter each taking parts to connect it, is expected to have a price tag of about $10 million. That trail system could also take on a larger role as a Camp Ripley Veterans State Trail gains traction.

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The grants, which could be available for the trail project from Paris Road in Baxter to Sylvan Township, add up to about $10 million. The Baxter/Sylvan Township application could be the only one for the funds this year. With a grant award announced this summer, construction could begin in 2025.

… That’s where our general support is — trying to make that park more accessible to the general public than what is currently there.

Brad Chapulis, Baxter city administrator

For a city that has long embraced trails, the opportunity for grant dollars arrived at a time when Baxter City Council members pointed to a considerable workload for staff time and project list already stretching over several years.

Todd Holman, who is Mississippi Headwaters Program director/Camp Ripley Sentinel Landscape coordinator and previously a longtime Baxter Council member, has been in talks with city staff and recently presented the options to the council. Holman said the stars aligned with Baxter’s land use plan identifying south Baxter as a potential corridor for a future east/west trail, and new federal money available to build trails and recreational facilities that gain from Camp Ripley’s Sentinel Landscape designation.

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“That’s why I’m here,” Holman said.

Mississippi Overlook Park Thursday, July 8, 2021, in Baxter.

Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch

Sylvan Township is interested in building a trailhead by County Highway 36 and Camp Jim Road intersection east to Baxter. Holman said Baxter’s plan would be to build a trail at Paris Road and Jasperwood Drive with trail parking and go west to County Highway 36. Holman said the grants can be used for anything that enables recreational facilities to develop.

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Holman said the project can also be broken up and scaled into phases.

“It doesn’t have to be all or nothing,” Holman said. “The opportunity is the funds are there now. They are appropriated annually. We don’t know if they will be there next year. … No one applied for it last year and I think we could be the only applicant for it this year.”

With this project and the Camp Ripley Sentinel Landscape designation there is the option to include more than one federal grant, which Holman said hardly ever happens so there is no asking for city or state bonding. Holman told council members during an earlier workshop session he understood the capacity question as city staff has a loaded agenda four years out with projects.

Items such as the

Highway 371 overpass

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and planning for connecting city streets for that $58 million project, which is likely three to four years away, and the cost overruns with the recent

Whiskey Creek project

were mentioned by the council.

In a public works report to the city in January, it was noted there could be significant costs to the city for upfront construction and administration with the trail as well as longterm costs for maintenance. Baxter would be asked to serve as the fiscal agent.

The trail system, with a secured corridor, could be a way to link Baxter and Sylvan Township and beyond now or in the future. The township is in support of the joint community trail grant project. In its resolution, Sylvan Township stated it placed a priority on development of township recreation opportunities and economies related to recreation.

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The council had several options to consider from Option A to Option D, with the ability to combine elements between them.

  • Option A creates an access road to Mississippi Overlook Park off Paris Road and parking lot closer to the Mississippi River at the park. It also has a paved trail connecting to the Paris Road and Jasperwood intersection, which connects with the Paul Bunyan State Trail.  
  • Option B runs a trail segment near the Mississippi Overlook Park access road on Paris Road, includes a trail bridge and continues west toward Island Lake. 
  • Option C includes a parking lot to the east of Island Lake and continues west with a bituminous trail and a north access road. The trail and road go around Island Lake on the north side and turn north to connect with Mapleton Road. 
  • Option D includes a bituminous trail to the west of Baxter and it turns south as it connects in Sylvan Township. 

Trevor Walter, Baxter public works director and city engineer, said if the council were to lean to Option A, he would add a caveat to that plan. Walter said Sylvan Township’s application jointly with this includes land acquisition to secure the trail corridor.

“So you are securing the land for the rest of the corridor in the future to connect this entrance of the Veterans Trail with what Sylvan Township is planning to do on their trail segments,” Walter said.

It doesn’t have to be all or nothing.

Todd Holman, Mississippi Headwaters Program director/Camp Ripley Sentinel Landscape coordinator

So if the council wanted to only do Option A, Walter recommended the two spots of land acquisition pieces in Option B be included in the application. Walter said the application would likely be looked at more favorably if it can show the trail can be connected in the future between the two government agencies. There are no time requirements for when the trail had to be completed, but Walter said the land would be secured and then that could go for future grants to complete the trail segments between Sylvan Township and Baxter. Securing the land now means there is a route for the trail to be built. Walter said this grant is one of the few that allows for land acquisition.

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“They’re one of the few grant opportunities that allow access to public property to be built,” Walter said, noting the option to use money to construct a road.

Baxter City Council members sit at the council table

Baxter City Council members Connie Lyscio, left, Zach Tabatt, Mayor Darrel Olson and Jeff Phillips meet Feb. 6 at City Hall.

Renee Richardson / Brainerd Dispatch

Brad Chapulis, city administrator, said there is an active group working on the Veterans State Trail that is in communication with the city. Josh Doty, community development director, said the group is continuing discussions with state representatives to secure funding and was looking to the city for support that land could be used for the trail.

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“These opportunities come along and I wrestle with them,” Mayor Darrel Olson said. “And I think, you know, there’s some good deals. And do we jump on them, or do we bypass it, and then wish we had jumped on it?”

Olson noted the Highway 371 overpass coming in the years ahead and the detours for the two-year project and all the things that go with it.

Map showing Mississippi Overlook Park in Baxter.

Mississippi Overlook Park is off Oakdale Road off Jasperwood Drive in south Baxter.

Contributed / Google Maps

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Council member Jeff Phillips said the mayor brought up a good point about grabbing opportunity. Phillips said the road access was important but he wasn’t convinced about the trail and probably wasn’t for any option unless someone said they really should do Option A.

“I’m not sure what the trail gets the residents of Baxter,” Phillips said.

Council member Zach Tabatt said he wasn’t pushing that option but “of all the options, that would be the most beneficial.”

Chapulis said Oakwood Road was never meant to be the permanent entrance to Mississippi Overlook Park, it’s always been at Paris Road but it was never the right time to make it happen.

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071121.N.BD.MississippiOverlook5.jpg

Mississippi Overlook Park Thursday, July 8, 2021, in Baxter. Kelly Humphrey / Brainerd Dispatch

“And in that context, that’s where our general support is trying to make that park more accessible to the general public than what is currently there,” Chapulis said, noting it would also be Americans with Disabilities Act accessible. “All those things are our goals of our comprehensive plan.”

Doty said at some point the city could be forced to do something for parking.

“So yes, it’s about the trail, but it’s also about a road and a parking lot,” Doty said.

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Phillips asked if the land acquisition piece from Option B could be moved in as well and was told it could be.

Olson asked staff to bring it back to the council for consideration. Chapulis said they would prepare documents based on Option A.

Where did the land come from?

Where did the public land come from that could be used for the trail? The 880-acre area includes 50-foot-high rolling hills of high quality natural land that features high biodiversity forests and wetlands, 1 mile of frontage along Pike Creek, and ownership entirely surrounding Island Lake. The city of Baxter received the land through a combination of a land donation and various acquisitions through grant funding from the U.S. Department of Defense Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration Program and the Environmental and Natural Resources Trust Fund, among others.

Mississippi Overlook Park and master plan

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The city has

studied the park and used consultants to develop a master plan

for the land with the idea of silent sports, educational opportunities, camping, greater park accessibility and potential soccer fields. Another part of the master plans was a future Camp Ripley Veterans State Trail, which is a legislatively authorized state trail.

The Veterans Trail’s master plan envisions a multi-use trail system, which can mean motorized and non-motorized in different areas, that would link the Soo Line Trail south of Little Falls to Crow Wing State Park and the Paul Bunyan State Trail. The Veterans trail would link the Central Lakes, Lake Wobegon, Soo Line, Paul Bunyan, Heartland and Mi-Gi-Zi trails into one continuous recreational route, as stated in the

executive summary of the trail alignment and development

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.

“These links also provide an opportunity to connect local trail systems in Central Minnesota as well as the communities of Baxter, Brainerd, Pillager, Randall, Little Falls and Fort Ripley. For purposes of this plan, the trail has been divided into six primary planning segments. The segments are Crow Wing State Park to the City of Pillager, the west side of Camp Ripley from Pillager to Randall, the south side of Camp Ripley from Randall to MN 371 and south to Little Falls, MN 371 to the Crow Wing State Park, the Little Falls Area, and from Little Falls to the Soo Line Regional Trail. … Trail cross-section examples were developed to illustrate a multi-use paved trail, gravel surfaced ATV trail and a natural surface equestrian track. Buffer areas between side-by-side multi-use trail alignments will likely be needed to ensure safety and a pleasant experience for all users.”

Council members are expected to consider the grant at their Tuesday, Feb. 20, meeting.

Renee Richardson, managing editor, may be reached at 218-855-5852 or renee.richardson@brainerddispatch.com. Follow on Twitter at @DispatchBizBuzz.





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Mississippi

Kohen Wiley: Police shooting of a 1-year-old Mississippi boy ignites tension between police and Black residents | CNN

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Kohen Wiley: Police shooting of a 1-year-old Mississippi boy ignites tension between police and Black residents | CNN



Jackson, MississippiAP — 

The fatal shooting of a 1-year-old boy by police who were responding to a shoplifting call this week has ignited simmering tensions between police and Black residents in the small town of Senatobia, Mississippi.

The death of Kohen Wiley is the latest in a series of troubling encounters with police that have outraged community members in recent years. It has led to protests and calls for greater police accountability in the town of 8,000, with some civil rights activists pointing to Kohen’s death as another example of a Black life lost over something of nominal value — in this case, allegedly stolen diapers.

“We are treating items on a shelf as more valuable than a child,” Bernice King, the daughter of civil right icon Martin Luther King, Jr., said in a statement posted to Instagram on Wednesday. “That is not just bad policing; it is a moral collapse.”

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There are still many unanswered questions about the shooting and what led up to it.

Senatobia police responded to the shoplifting call at a local Walmart on Sunday, where they found two women and a child leaving the store, getting into a car and driving away. According to a statement released by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation: “Officers attempted to stop the vehicle, but the driver drove in the direction of the officers, almost striking one. An officer then discharged their weapon and the vehicle fled the scene.”

Kohen’s mother, Vellesiya Wiley, said her son and her friend, who was driving, were hit by gunfire. In a video posted on social media Wednesday by civil rights attorney Ben Crump, Wiley said her friend was not driving toward the officers because they were “all on the right side and she was driving towards the left.”

She also disputes the shoplifting claim, saying in the video that she believes her friend paid for the diapers she was carrying.

Policing expert Ian Adams, who teaches criminal justice at the University of South Carolina, said regardless of the circumstances, the officer should not have fired at the car.

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“Modern policing knows that shooting into a moving vehicle is a very bad idea and one to be avoided at almost all costs,′ Adams said. For one thing, ”vehicles have other occupants, which is obviously a concern here in the current case.”

Kohen was Black, as are his mother and her friend, and the circumstances leading to Kohen’s death quickly drew comparisons to another Black mother shot during a response to a shoplifting accusation.

In 2023, Ta’Kiya Young, who was pregnant, was shot by police in a Columbus, Ohio, suburb, after they attempted to apprehend her. Police said Young, who was also the mother of two young sons, got into her car and accelerated in the direction of the officer who fired at her through the windshield. Both Young and her unborn daughter were killed.

The officer in that case was acquitted of criminal charges and found justified in his use of force by a review board.

The two deaths join a long list of other instances of Black Americans dying in interactions with police after accusations of petty criminal offenses. That list includes the murder of George Floyd in 2020, who was killed after police responded to a call that he used a fake $20 bill at a Minneapolis grocery store.

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For some racial justice advocates, such cases serve as a constant reminder of the consequences of systemic racism in law enforcement.

“In the name of ‘law and order,’ a child was killed and family was shattered over items that could be restocked, written off, and replaced,” King wrote on Instagram. “Our charge is clear: until the sacredness of human life is the starting point of every police encounter, we must demand changes in training and work unrelentingly to reform policies around police accountability.”

Marquell Bridges, the president and founder of an advocacy group called the Building Bridges Coalition and who has been helping the Wiley family, said Kohen’s death was “just the breaking point” after years of problematic interactions between Black residents and police.

Bridges pointed to an encounter last year in which an officer threatened Breshari Faulkner with a Taser, pulled her from her car onto the ground and arrested her during a confrontation over a handicapped parking space in the same Walmart lot where Kohen was shot.

Two years earlier, in 2023, a Senatobia officer was fired for his role in arresting a 10-year-old Black boy who had urinated in a different parking lot. The boy’s family settled a federal lawsuit with the city earlier this year.

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“There is a culture there that they are above the law – just because they wear a uniform,” said civil rights attorney Carlos Moore, who has represented the 10-year-old boy and others accusing the department of misconduct.

Police did not respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press. The mayor and city aldermen also did not respond to messages.

About 40% of the city’s population of approximately 8,300 is Black, according to 2020 Census data. Police did not respond to questions about the racial makeup of the department, but the mayor and a majority of the Board of Alderman members are white. The city has elected only three Black aldermen since it became a municipality in 1860, according to the Tate Record, a local newspaper.

The officer who shot Kohen and the woman driving the car he was in has been placed on administrative leave, a standard practice, while the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation looks into what happened. They have promised to release video of the shooting once the investigation is complete.

Kohen’s grandmother, Veronica Roberson, was there when Kohen was born and babysat him often. She described him as a happy little baby with “the prettiest smile you could ever imagine.”

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She said he was a sweet child and: “He just loved on me, and I loved on him. We loved each other.”

One of his favorite toys was a little lawnmower that would blow bubbles when pushed. Roberson would sit outside with him while he played with it. “He really thought he was mowing my yard,” she said, laughing a little at the memory. “That baby was my world.”



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Mississippi veterans urged to seek PTSD help during Awareness Month

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Mississippi veterans urged to seek PTSD help during Awareness Month


JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) – Millions of Americans live with post-traumatic stress disorder, and this June, mental health experts at the Jackson VA Hospital are urging Mississippi veterans not to wait to get help.

June is PTSD Awareness Month, a nationwide effort to combat stigma and connect those struggling with trauma to available resources. At the Jackson VA Hospital, counselors say the disorder is far more common than most people realize, and it rarely looks the way Hollywood portrays it.

“What we typically see is individuals who are trying their best to manage with an insurmountable amount of negative emotions, anger, fear, shame, guilt, sadness, regret,” said Alex Rakhshan, manager of the PTSD Residential Program at the Jackson VA Hospital. “And they’ve done their best. They’ve done the best they can to manage through.”

Rakhshan, a licensed psychologist with nearly 10 years of experience, says one of the biggest barriers to treatment is avoidance, and it doesn’t always look the way people expect.

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“Avoidance takes many forms, such as working really hard, doing a lot of work in the community, volunteering, staying really focused on the needs of other people,” Rakhshan said. “And while that is laudable, ultimately it serves as a way to stay away from and push away some of those challenging beliefs.”

Rakhshan says PTSD affects all ages and walks of life, not just combat veterans. Natural disasters, car accidents, childhood abuse and neglect can all be triggers. However, veterans face a higher prevalence of the disorder due to the elevated dangers of military service.

Treatment at the VA has changed dramatically over the last decade. Veterans can now receive therapy from the comfort of their own homes through video health technology. Shorter treatment options, like written exposure therapy, a five-session program, are also now widely available, lowering the barrier for veterans hesitant to commit to a full course of treatment.

Iraq War veteran Mike Watkins knows that barrier well. Watkins served as a medic, deploying to Iraq in October 2003 and returning in November 2004. He was stationed in Balad, Taji, Fallujah, Samarra and Mosul. After coming home, he spent years managing hypervigilance, avoiding crowds and struggling to readjust to civilian life before seeking treatment.

“Whether you got a performance car or you’re just trying to take care of your body or you’re cleaning up your house, maintenance is key,” Watkins said. “The way you create muscles is by ripping and regrowing new ones. That’s a metaphor for what you’re doing emotionally.”

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Rakhshan says the first step doesn’t have to be intimidating. “They can just give us a call. We don’t lock you in. You don’t need a signature on a form guaranteeing you’re going to show up. We’re here to serve,” Rakhshan said.

The Jackson VA Hospital offers a range of PTSD treatment options, from in-person counseling to medication to video therapy from home. Veterans and their caregivers are encouraged to contact the Jackson VA Hospital to learn more. No appointment is needed to make that first call.

PTSD affects an estimated 12 million Americans in any given year, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

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Post-Tropical Storm Arthur unleashes High Risk Level 4 flood threat to Mississippi | Latest Weather Clips | FOX Weather

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Post-Tropical Storm Arthur unleashes High Risk Level 4 flood threat to Mississippi | Latest Weather Clips | FOX Weather


Post-Tropical Storm Arthur unleashes High Risk Level 4 flood threat to Mississippi

The Mississippi coastline is under a rare Level 4 out of 4 High Risk flood threat as remnants of Post-Tropical Storm Arthur continue fueling hazards through late week. FOX Weather Correspondent Brandy Campbell brings us the latest live from Biloxi, Mississippi, where rain is already falling:



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