Minneapolis, MN
V3 Sports aquatic, recreation center looks to bridge racial gap in north Minneapolis
V3 Sports is at the gateway of north Minneapolis, on the corner of Plymouth and Lyndale Avenues. And its founders hope it will be a gateway to access for swimming and recreation for the community.
“North Minneapolis deserves it,” V3 Executive Director Malik Rucker told MPR News host Cathy Wurzer. “To be able to invest at this level in North Minneapolis was important for us, because oftentimes our community finds itself having to go to the suburbs or communities that are not ours to get those resources.”
The center opened to north Minneapolis residents only on May 11, but will be holding their grand opening on Saturday. They plan to serve 1,000 people per day, with half of those being youth. They expect to see 10,000 visitors annually.
The grand opening is just the beginning of a two-phase plan. The first phase includes a group and individual fitness space, drop-in child care center, out-of-school activities and its crown jewel: a 25-yard teaching and training pool.
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Inside the pool won’t be your standard swim lessons. Ayanna Rahku has developed a first-of-its-kind swimming program called “Swim 2 Learn.” Rahku is a board member for V3 Sports.
Her PhD dissertation at the University of Minnesota was titled “Mother May I Swim?” and looked at the reasons why many African American mothers and their children don’t swim.
Rahku found there are several barriers for African Americans including generational trauma, drownings or bad experiences in water, “so that automatically brings some fear to that aspect,” she said.
Drowning rates among African American males aged 15 to 24 are three times higher than any other racial group in this age range in Minnesota, according to the Minnesota Department of Health in 2022.
Rakhu’s new swim philosophy is focused what she calls the “swim efficacy reclamation model.” Rahku turned that model into a program called “Swim 2 Learn.”
Its tenets are the five R’s: Reflect, Reconcile, Reassess, Respond and Reform. Before swimmers even get in the water, they’re thinking about their relationship to water first, and working through any associated trauma.
“It’s really a way to help people connect and have a relationship with the water. So it’s very self-informed and about self-awareness, which I think is different than what a lot of people are offering,” Rakhu said.
On top of “Swim 2 Learn,” V3 Sports will also offer “Swim 2 Earn” which is designed for people exploring a career in aquatics. There also will be Open Pool time and Pool Play.
V3 Sports also has 5,500 square feet of fitness equipment, group fitness classes, drop-in childcare, Boys and Girls Club programming and a restaurant — the first on Plymouth Avenue in 20 years.
Phase two of V3 Sports is expected to be completed in 2027 and will include an Olympic-sized 50-meter competitive pool.
Courtesy V3 Sports
The current offerings are just the beginning. Phase two of V3 Sports includes plans for a 50-meter Olympic-sized competition pool that was used during the 2021 Olympic Swimming Trials in Omaha, Nebraska.
“It got shipped here on four semis from Omaha, and then it’s in storage now, but then, once we build it back up, we’ll put it back together,” said Rucker.
Phase two is set to open in 2027.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey signs gun ban ordinance
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey signed a new ordinance that carries a ban on assault weapons but won’t take effect unless there are major changes to state law.
Minneapolis gun ban ordinance signed
What we know:
The Minneapolis City Council approved the ordinance during its meeting last week.
The firearm regulations ordinance includes a ban on assault weapons, ghost guns, binary triggers, and high-capacity magazines. The ordinance also includes safe storage provisions for firearms.
Big picture view:
Many of the provisions in the law won’t go into effect unless there is a change in state law. Currently, Minnesota law prevents municipalities from enacting gun regulations.
Minnesota law only allows cities to bar the discharge of firearms within city limits and adopt regulations that are identical to state laws. Any regulations that go beyond state law are voided, according to state statute.
Local perspective:
Action on the gun ordinance was spurred by last year’s shooting at Annunciation Church and School. Two students were killed while attending morning mass at the church and more than two dozen students and parishioners were hurt in the barrage of gunfire.
Last week, parents of Annunciation students spoke out in support of the ordinance at a public hearing.
Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus threatens lawsuit
The other side:
Last year, St. Paul passed a similar law. The Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus filed a lawsuit shortly after the ordinance was signed. Arguments were heard last month on the case and a judge has set a trial for next year.
In a statement last week, the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus said it was evaluating its legal options in Minneapolis.
Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus Chair Bryan Strawser said:
“The City of Minneapolis is attempting to make a political statement with an ordinance it has no legal authority to enact. Minnesota law clearly preempts the entire field of firearms regulation, and local governments cannot simply ignore state statute because they dislike the policy outcome.
“If the City Council moves forward with this unlawful ordinance, we will evaluate every available legal option to challenge it, just as we did in Saint Paul.
“The law is not optional, even for Minneapolis.”
Minneapolis, MN
Police investigating south Minneapolis shooting that left man wounded
A man was hurt in a shooting in south Minneapolis late Tuesday night, according to police.
A report of shots fired brought officers to the 2600 block of Third Avenue South around 9:50 p.m., the Minneapolis Police Department said. They found evidence of gunfire and began investigating.
Later, a man with survivable gunshot wounds showed up at Hennepin Healthcare.
No one has been arrested.
Minneapolis, MN
Gun safety bill fate in Minnesota
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