Minneapolis, MN
Do you qualify for free lead pipe replacement in Mpls.?
When Minneapolis resident Jamie Laudert took her two sons for a routine checkup nearly two years ago, she was shocked to learn both her 2-year-old, Leo, and 1-year-old, Dario, had tested positive for elevated lead in their blood.
After the positive tests, officials from Hennepin County and the city of Minneapolis stepped in to help Laudert find and get rid of the lead in her more than 100-year-old home. That meant replacing their windows, putting new treads on the basement stairs, and scraping, then repainting, chipping paint on their porch.
“We never would have been able to afford all of the things that they gave us, and if we tried to do it ourselves, it would have taken us many years to get this work done,” Laudert said during an October 22 news conference in front of her home, where the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development presented city officials with a $6.7 million check for work to mitigate lead exposure. “So we are so incredibly grateful.”
Thanks to an infusion of state and federal funding, Minneapolis is in the midst of a massive effort to remove lead from residential homes, which includes replacing lead service lines at 40,000 homes in the next decade.
The city has completed an inventory of all water service lines in Minneapolis, and letters went out to homeowners with lead service lines in mid-November. The city plans to replace 400 service lines — free of charge to homeowners — by the end of 2024, and another 1,000 in 2025.
If you live in an older Minneapolis home, here’s how you get it inspected:
How does lead show up in homes?
About 80% of homes in Minneapolis were built before 1978, when the federal government banned the use of lead-based paint.
The presence of lead paint itself is not a hazard, said Alex Vollmer, manager of the city’s Lead and Healthy Homes program, in an interview. But the deterioration of the paint through normal wear and tear, like walking on a floor or opening and closing windows, can create dust, which when ingested by a child can, in turn, cause elevated blood lead levels.
“That’s kind of been the historical standard for identifying lead based paint hazards at properties and in performing more abatement,” Vollmer said.
Aging water infrastructure has also been a focus for the city, as hundreds of water service lines — the pipes that connect the city’s water main to the meter inside a resident’s property — are made of lead and need to be replaced. The service lines could contaminate a resident’s drinking water and expose them to lead.
Nationally, the cost of replacing an aging service line ranges from $1,200 to $12,300, according to estimates by the Environmental Protection Agency.
What does lead poisoning look like?
Lead poisoning in children and pregnant people can cause damage to the brain and nervous system but doesn’t show immediate outward symptoms, making it nearly impossible to detect without a blood test.
Despite federal regulations, the Legislature passed the Minnesota Lead Poisoning Prevention Act to further prevent and reduce lead exposure to children and pregnant people. The current threshold for elevated blood lead levels is 3.5 micrograms per deciliter, which is down from 5 in 2014 and 10 in 2008.
In 2023, there were more than 100 cases of lead poisoning in Hennepin County, said Amy Waller, a public health nurse with the county, during the news conference on Oct. 22.
When children are found to have elevated blood levels, parents are given education on nutrition and assistance monitoring children’s development going forward.
“Lead is very dangerous, but lead poisoning is preventable,” Waller said. “Learn what lead paint looks like. We want to be using these resources before children are lead poisoned.”
How does lead abatement work?
Lead abatement, or the process of removing lead from a home, starts with an inspection including tests of a home’s high-contact painted surfaces, such as windows, porches, floors, doors and stairs.
The process of identifying the source of lead could take a few days, then a consultation determines how long the work will take, and whether families can remain in the home during the process.
As of October, Vollmer’s department has held 19 lead education events in communities around the city. At those events, 265 children were tested for blood lead levels in partnership with the Sustainable Resources Center’s Leadie Eddie mobile testing van.
Since 2022, the Lead and Healthy Homes program has proactively inspected more than 750 homes citywide, and found that more than 600 of them had lead paint hazards. In that same timeframe, the team has spent $3.2 million on contracted services that focused on replacing windows, doors and stair treads.
How can I get my home inspected?
Vollmer said the program uses a number of pathways to engage families. The first is a diagnosis of elevated blood lead levels in a child. The city also has an “open enrollment” option where homeowners can ask for inspections.
The Lead and Healthy Homes program has three grants to fund renovation efforts, all with different eligibility rules based on family income, the age of the home and whether a child lives there, among other factors.
City staff also table at community events and doorknock in priority neighborhoods, or neighborhoods that have more children with elevated blood lead levels, based on state data and data collected by the city.
“We don’t want our children to be used as lead detectors, and we want to make sure that all houses in Minneapolis are safe,” Vollmer said at the news conference. “We believe that affordable housing should not be substandard housing, so we want to provide Minneapolis property owners and residents with tools to make sure that they can keep their family safe.”
Minneapolis, MN
Sen. John Curtis says DHS secretary ‘lost’ trust following Minneapolis shooting
SALT LAKE CITY — Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s response to a fatal shooting by federal agents in Minneapolis will “forever undermine trust” with Americans, Utah Sen. John Curtis said Thursday.
Speaking to reporters at the state Capitol, Curtis expanded on his criticism of Noem after previously calling her response to the Jan. 24 shooting of 37-year-old Alex Pretti “premature.” Noem initially said Pretti, a U.S. citizen, committed an “act of domestic terrorism” and planned to kill officers, even though videos showed him holding a cellphone, not a weapon.
Curtis quickly joined others in calling for an independent investigation into the shooting.
“I think it will forever undermine trust that she has with the American people,” Curtis said of Noem’s response. “Now, at this point, I think it’s up to the president to see if that’s salvageable, but I do think a lot of trust was lost, and as you know, trust is very hard to rebuild.”
The senator’s comments came amid a partial government shutdown impacting the Department of Homeland Security, which Noem oversees. Democrats are pushing for reforms to immigration enforcement procedures after Pretti and Renée Good, also a U.S. citizen, were fatally shot by agents in Minneapolis last month.
Curtis said he’s still “hopeful” a resolution to end the shutdown can be reached, although he acknowledged negotiations between President Donald Trump and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer appear to have stalled.
The shutdown impacts agencies like the Transportation Security Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. However, ICE and CBP operations are still funded thanks to the “One Big Beautiful Bill” that passed last year, the Associated Press reported.
“(I’m) really frustrated myself,” Curtis said. “I just do not like shutdowns. There’s nothing good that comes out of a shutdown.”
Curtis said he supports “reasonable reforms” at the Department of Homeland Security, such as better training for agents and scrutinizing how quickly they are being hired. As for Democrats’ demands that ICE agents stop wearing masks in the field, Curtis was less enthusiastic. He said there are known instances of immigration agents being doxxed, with personal information about them and their families publicly posted online.
“It’s easy for me to say this is not just as clean-cut as ‘don’t wear a mask,’” he said.
There have been rumblings that an immigrant detention facility may be coming to Salt Lake City, prompting protests by some Utahns. Curtis said state lawmakers raised that issue with him on Thursday during private meetings, but he has not had any discussions with the Trump administration about it.
“But I’m happy to advocate on behalf of the state and do what’s best for the state,” Curtis added. “Beyond that, I’ve not had conversations.”
Opposition to Trump nominee
Curtis recently announced his opposition to one of Trump’s nominees for a high-ranking State Department position, likely tanking the nomination.
Jeremy Carl was tapped to serve as an assistant secretary of state for International Organizations, but Curtis grilled him during a recent hearing over previous statements Carl had made suggesting that Jewish people focus too much on the Holocaust.
“I’m not convinced that Jeremy Carl is the right person to represent our nation’s best interests in international forums, and I find his anti-Israel views and insensitive remarks about Jews unbecoming of the position for which he has been nominated,” the senator stated last week.
This is the first time Curtis has outright opposed one of Trump’s nominees. But it’s not the first time the freshman senator has raised questions about them. Curtis was reportedly one of several GOP senators who helped sink former Rep. Matt Gaetz’s nomination as attorney general.
Daniel Woodruff, KSL
Curtis also expressed concerns about confirming Pete Hegseth as secretary of defense. Hegseth was accused of sexual assault, heavy drinking, financial mismanagement and other things. Curtis initially said those allegations were “serious,” but he ultimately voted to confirm Hegseth.
Asked on Thursday why he decided to come out so strongly against Carl’s nomination, the senator said: “There’s a difference between concerns and an outright no.”
“I was willing to give a lot of deference to the president in his selection,” Curtis said of Trump’s cabinet nominees. “I think at that point I’m looking for fatal flaws, right? That’s a line I can’t cross. Jeremy Carl, to me, has fatal flaws.”
Curtis added he chose to “speak out early” against Carl.
“I didn’t want this thing to mature and have people question where I was at,” he said. “The longer it goes, the better I actually feel about my decision.”
Curtis talks priorities and AI regulation
Curtis spoke to reporters after meeting with state lawmakers from both parties about his priorities in Congress that include tax relief, cutting regulation around housing and transportation, streamlining the development of clean energy and protecting children online.
As the Utah Legislature weighs several bills this session dealing with artificial intelligence, the Trump administration is pressuring one state representative to drop his bill requiring AI developers to implement plans to keep children safe while using the emerging technology. Actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt even came to the Capitol to speak in favor of the bill.
“We are categorically opposed to Utah HB286 and view it as an unfixable bill that goes against the administration’s AI agenda,” a letter from the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs reads.
Curtis said Congress is “wrestling” with potential AI regulations.
“I personally think there’s probably a lane for states, and there’s probably a lane for the federal government,” he said. “We need to define that and make sure that everybody is in their lanes.”
Curtis said he’s worried about ceding the technology race to global adversaries but added he thinks there is broad support for regulations aimed at protecting kids.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
Minneapolis, MN
Man sentenced to more than 86 years for Minneapolis triple homicide
A man was sentenced to more than 86 years in prison for a triple homicide that occurred in Minneapolis in October 2024, the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office said.
Earl Bennett, 42, was sentenced for three counts of murder, which will be served consecutively, according to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office. He was given credit for 478 days already served.
He was also sentenced for illegal firearm possession, which he will serve at the same time as the murder sentences.
Minneapolis police were called to a triple shooting at a homeless encampment near 44th Street and Snelling Avenue on Oct. 27, 2024.
Louis Mitchell Lemons Jr., 32, and Christopher Martell Washington, 38, were pronounced dead at the scene. Samantha Jo Moss, 35, was rushed to the hospital, where she died nearly a week later.
Woman dies nearly a week after triple shooting at Minneapolis encampment; suspect charged | 2 dead, 1 seriously injured following 2nd fatal encampment shooting in as many days
A witness told police that a man who identified himself as “E” asked to speak with one of the people in a tent and then started shooting 10 to 15 minutes after being allowed inside. Surveillance video showed him leaving the scene on an e-bike.
Earlier that week, authorities say Bennett shot and critically injured a man at a sober living home on Columbus Avenue South. He faces one count of attempted first-degree murder in connection with this shooting and is scheduled to make his next court appearance in this case on April 17.
Bennett was also shot by St. Paul police days after the Minneapolis shootings. Authorities say he pointed a gun at officers, who then shot him. He was brought to the hospital and recovered from his injuries. He is charged with one count of second-degree assault and one count of illegal firearm possession in connection with this incident and is scheduled to make a court appearance on March 5 for this case.
Minneapolis, MN
Breaking the ice: A Minneapolis man’s mission to keep the Twin Cities on solid ground
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A Minneapolis man is on a mission to keep the Twin Cities safe on the ice.
Ice safety advocate
What we know:
Steven Glasford, who moved to Minneapolis from Boston, has embraced the city’s outdoor lifestyle. “I moved here from Boston and I kind of fell in love with the city’s park systems,” said Glasford.
He enjoys biking on the ice, saying, “I love to bike on the ice, that’s one of my favorite things to do is just to go biking on it.”
Once a week, Glasford bikes across frozen lakes to measure ice thickness. “It’s just easy, repetitive,” he said.
Using an auger, he drills through the ice to check its thickness.
“Right here it’s 23 inches thick. So that’s about like this thick. So you could easily drive a car on here,” he explained.
Growing community interest
The backstory:
Glasford began this project to ensure the ice was safe for his bike commute as a Metro Transit bus driver. “
“So I can get from here to the southern part of the lake In about five minutes, and it takes me 10 minutes otherwise,” he said.
His efforts have expanded to include several lakes, and his findings on Reddit have garnered up to 50,000 views weekly.
“Everybody who lives on the shoreline, everybody lives in the neighborhood and wants to go onto the ice, wants to know, like, ‘Hey, like to know how thick it is,’” said Glasford.
He recently assisted organizers in confirming ice strength for a community event supporting Minnesota’s immigrants.
No one on thin ice
What they’re saying:
Glasford says he isn’t worried about falling through the ice himself because the orange suit he wears doubles as a life vest, which helps him keep his head above water.
But it’s his mission that keeps his spirits afloat, and he has no plans to ride off into the sunset just yet.
“It’s kind of cool. Not many people get to be able to be like, ‘Hey, this is my job.’ I can go on ice whenever I want,” said Glasford.
The full frozen lakes report can be found here.
The Source: This story uses information gathered by FOX 9 reporter Maury Glover.
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