Minneapolis, MN
Our Streets Isn't Just for Minneapolis Anymore – Racket
Welcome back to The Flyover, your daily digest of important, overlooked, and/or interesting Minnesota news stories.
Our Streets Minneapolis
In a small but telling move, the transportation advocacy org Our Streets Minneapolis is dropping the “Minneapolis” from its name. According to a press release, “The slight rebrand better reflects their ongoing campaign to convert an urban stretch of Interstate 94, which straddles the Twin Cities, to a multimodal boulevard.” That press release also trumpets the $1.6 million federal grant Our Streets was awarded and its part in the “Bring Back 6th” campaign to convert Olson Memorial Highway into a boulevard.
Our Streets’ work is clearly no longer limited to Minneapolis, but it’s hard not to also see the name shift as a commentary on how the city of Minneapolis estranged itself from a valuable nonprofit. The organization once put on the popular Open Streets program, but after a budget dispute between Minneapolis Public Works and Our Streets, and some very confusing messaging from the city, Minneapolis and Our Streets have parted ways. The program is still on for 2024, but given the city’s belated request for proposals and the uncertainty of how it would proceed, it seems like Open Streets is on shaky ground.
Following this incredible and largely unacknowledged fumble on the part of the Frey administration, here’s hoping Our Streets gets to work with more receptive governmental structures in the future.
The Strib Speaks for the Trees
Every so often, the biggest newspaper in Minnesota puts its resources to work to produce the kind of story that we scrappy little shoestring upstarts can only dream of. This week, the Strib went all in with this look at the Legacy Tree, a celebrated white cedar up near the Boundary Waters, its existence threatened by climate change. “We’re in such dark existential times,” says Paul Schurke of the Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge in the BWCA. “[The tree] gives us hope because it’s seen its own share of existential threats.”
The story, which covers the history of the region and speculates on its future, is beautifully illustrated with detailed maps, rich photography and immersive video, and a timeline of human history as represented in the cedar’s rings. Kudos to Jake Steinberg, who contributed story and graphics, and Anthony Soufflé, who handled photos and video.
Alas, I couldn’t resist clicking the little green comment bubble at the end of the story, where various experts had gathered to tell me that climate change was either not real or not man-made and that the tree would either be fine or that its death would be no big loss. Which reminded me that aside from investing in more stories like this, another way the Strib could improve itself its to finally discontinue its often-reprehensible comments section.
Live Where You (Used to) Work
The commercial vacancy rate in the Twin Cities is currently 22.6%, and no matter what Minneapolis Mayor Frey called for in his State of the City address today, the workers who stopped going into the office at the start of Covid are not all coming back. So what do we do with the giant glass edifices whose construction our cities did so much to encourage over the past few decades? Well, we could turn them into housing.
Today MPR News spoke with developer Chris Sherman, who believes “he can create hundreds of new homes without ever having to put a shovel in the ground.” Sherman Associates is currently converting Landmark Towers in St. Paul and Northstar Center in Minneapolis, where the developer plans to spend $185 million in the transformation of 600,000 square feet of office space into 400 units of housing. What if the city of the future was no longer a centered commercial/retail/tourist hub but was composed instead of an interrelated series of neighborhoods?
I know—cities rely on a commercial tax base to survive. But as St. Paul City Council Member Rebecca Noeker puts it, when it comes to taxes, “We know that a full bustling residential building is far, far better than a mostly vacant office building.”
More Like Denver Nug-ASS
We’ve got nothing to say about the Wolves’ vicious 106-80 trouncing of the Denver Nuggets last night that you couldn’t see with your own disbelieving eyes. So let’s just celebrate the easily celebratable Anthony Edwards, who scored 27 points last night along with two rebounds, seven assists, and two steals. “Once I found my second wind I knew there was nobody that could stop me,” the new face of the NBA told Marney Gellner of Bally Sports North after the game.
Incidentally, an older chat between Gellner and Edwards is blowing up online today, and it’s too fun not to share. In it, Edwards discusses the sports he played growing up, including baseball (he batted “straight cleanup on aisle three, come get it”) as well as hypothetical sports he would also excel in, including “tennis, swimming, la crosse—whatever you need me to play.” Gotta love the guy.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis grocery store owner charged in $1 million food assistance fraud
A Minneapolis grocery store owner faces felony charges in what investigators say was a million-dollar food assistance fraud scheme.
Abdid-Wahid Mohamed is accused of using other people’s EBT cards to get more than a million dollars to buy items from wholesale stores that he later sold at his own store.
EBT cards work like debit cards for low-income families who receive government-paid benefits.
Investigators said Mohamed owned Minnesota Food Grocery LLC near West Lake Street in Minneapolis and was seen buying items such as energy drinks and baby formula with EBT cards that did not belong to him.
Investigators said Mohamed then loaded the goods into his vehicles and took them to Minnesota Food Grocery, where they were unloaded and placed on store shelves for resale.
The court filing says one woman identified as F.F. told investigators she had not paid for groceries at Minnesota Food Grocery for more than 1.5 years after agreeing to let Mohamed use her EBT card.
The charging document says that between March 8, 2021 and Aug. 10, 2021, Mohamed received $1,141,082 in EBT payments.
If convicted, Mohamed could face up to 20 years in prison.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis grocer charged in $1.1 million SNAP fraud scheme
Food insecurity in Minnesota: SNAP cuts and rising demand
Minnesota food shelves are facing growing pressure as potential federal SNAP cuts, rising grocery prices and increased demand strain already limited resources. Some providers also report impacts tied to recent immigration enforcement activity, with families hesitant to seek assistance. Wendy Behm of ACBC Food Shelf joins to discuss how organizations are responding, efforts to combat food insecurity across the state, and what’s at stake during the current legislative session. Learn more at acbcfoodshelf.com.
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A Minneapolis grocery store owner is facing a felony charge after investigators say he trafficked more than $1.1 million in SNAP benefits using other people’s EBT cards.
SNAP benefits trafficking investigation leads to felony charge
What we know:
According to criminal charges filed in Hennepin County Court, Abdidwahid Mohamed, owner of Minnesota Food Grocery LLC, is accused of using EBT cards registered to other people to purchase items like energy drinks and baby formula at Sam’s Club and Costco between March 8, 2021 and August 10, 2021. The goods were then resold at his store.
The complaint states law enforcement says they watched Mohamed make the purchases and tracked him returning directly to his store with the items. Video surveillance and GPS data confirmed the trips, and investigators say many of the EBT cardholders were out of the country or denied shopping at the stores Mohamed visited.
The complaint states, “Mohamed received $1,141,082 in EBT payments” during the period in question. The federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is designed to help low-income households buy food, with benefits issued through EBT cards that work like debit cards.
Wal-Mart team sparks investigation
The backstory:
The investigation began when Wal-Mart’s Global Investigation Team flagged suspicious EBT transactions at Sam’s Club locations in Minneapolis. The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) was contacted in May 2021, and surveillance of Mohamed followed.
The complaint states on Aug. 10, 2021, law enforcement executed search warrants at Mohamed’s store and vehicles. He was arrested at a Sam’s Club in Bloomington with an EBT card and a handwritten note containing a PIN number. Interviews with more than two dozen EBT cardholders revealed that many claimed their cards were lost or had never been used at the stores in question.
One woman admitted she had not shopped at Minnesota Food Grocery for more than a year-and-a-half after agreeing to let Mohamed use her EBT card.
The complaint states the offense “involved a high degree of sophistication or planning or occurred over a lengthy period of time.”
What’s next:
If convicted, Mohamed faces up to 20 years in prison or a $100,000 fine.
The Source: Information from a criminal complaint filed in Hennepin County District Court.
Minneapolis, MN
Truck driver dead after crash sends Metro Transit bus into home in south Minneapolis
It happened early Monday morning in Minneapolis.
One person is dead and another is hospitalized after an early-morning crash in south Minneapolis on Monday that sent a Metro Transit bus into a home.
It happened at around 4 a.m. at 10th Avenue South and East 38th Street, just a few blocks east of George Floyd Square.
A spokesperson for Metro Transit police tells 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS that a truck was speeding down 10th Avenue when it hit the back of the bus, ripping a tire off the bus and sending it into the front of a home.
The driver of that truck died, according to Metro Transit police, while the driver of the bus was taken to a hospital but is expected to be OK.
Officials say nobody besides the driver was on the bus at the time, and the home the bus hit was also empty at the time.
Investigators are still at the scene, working to clean up all of the debris and determine exactly what led up to the crash.
5 EYEWITNESS NEWS is at the scene and working to learn more. Download the KSTP app and follow 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS on social media for the latest updates.
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