Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis launches year-round shared e-bike and scooter program
For Minneapolis residents and tourists seeking transportation options beyond cars and buses, the city launched its shared e-bike and scooter program.
Companies Lime and Spin will pilot year-round operations, as the weather allows. Previously, the program shut down at the end of November and resumed in April.
“What’s kind of changing this year is we have their license actually extends through the winter, and so if they still find it worth it, they’re going to be authorized to keep their vehicles out throughout the winter, as long as there’s not an excessive amount of snow and ice buildup,” said Dillon Fried, a senior project manager with the city’s public works department who oversees the program.
Fried said licensees Lime and Spin will each have 1,000 e-bikes and 1,000 scooters to rent. Both companies will have Class 1 pedal assist e-bikes and Class 2 e-bikes.
The city said equity is a focus of the program. At least 30 percent of the scooters must be distributed in equity distribution areas in north and south Minneapolis. A maximum of 40 percent is allowed in downtown, and the remaining 30 percent is for other neighborhoods.
“If you don’t own your bike, or if you’re somewhere where you don’t have your bike around, and you want to take a trip on an e-bike or scooter that’s relatively affordable, it’s a great option to use micro-mobility instead of using some other type of transportation,” Fried said.
Fried says in 2024, participants took 1.25 million rides, surpassing pre-pandemic levels by 200,000.
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Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis City Council considers $1M in rental assistance for families facing eviction during ICE operations
Minneapolis City Council considers $1M in rental assistance for families facing eviction during ICE operations
The Minneapolis City Council is considering $1 million is rental assistance for families facing eviction during federal immigration operations.
Council members say this money would help 250 families who are afraid to go to work and get picked up by ICE, but who are also afraid of the looming threat of eviction if they don’t go to work. The City Council voted that the funds will come from the city’s cash balance.
Hennepin County already offers more than $10 million in rental assistance, but City Council members say this additional money would help the families who have fallen through the cracks.
Minneapolis, MN
St. Joseph community gathers in reflection, solidarity with Minneapolis
ST. JOSEPH, Mich. (WSBT) — A community gathering Wednesday night in St. Joseph focused on solidarity with Minneapolis.
Interfaith Action of Southwest Michigan, along with several local partners, hosted an evening of prayer, action and reflection after a nationwide call for clergy and faith leaders to respond.
Reverends shared a message about communities at the event.
Rev. Jeffrey Hubers said, “So even though it might seem like Minneapolis is far away, or those events are isolated, these things are happening here. We do have migrant neighbors, we do have a migrant local population, and so we want to show up for them just as we’re showing up for our neighbors in Minneapolis.”
Interfaith leaders hope events like this inspire more local engagement for justice and community well-being.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis teachers’ union chief says bosses and officials join anti-ICE Signal chats
Minneapolis Federation of Educators President Marcia Howard said that teachers along with their “bosses” and elected officials are present and active in anti-ICE group chats.
Howard, an outspoken leftist political activist since the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, shared in an interview with Al Jazeera that she and other teachers-turned activists are undeterred in participating in anti-ICE protests and watches because leadership stands behind them.
“The notion that people that are actively engaged in ICE watch, in being vigilant, in protecting our neighbors in signal chat groups, running plates on their [ICE] cars, doing patrols that somehow we’re ashamed of that activity, that somehow you can call our bosses or show our faces, and then we would be shunned by our community,” Howard said.
“Our bosses are in the signal chats with us. Our elected officials are in the chats with us.”
“Our nana’s, the hockey coaches, the soccer moms. Everybody that’s anybody is doing the work of protecting our neighbors, because that’s how we show up in Minneapolis and St Paul,” Howard continued.
Following the death of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer six summers ago, Howard, an English teacher of 25 years, became a leading voice in the summer protests, which turned into riots. She played a prominent role in the creation of George Floyd Square, which marked where Floyd was killed.
Howard criticized the federal immigration agents which have overtaken Minneapolis over the past month, accusing the agents of being agitators.
“We’re armed with whistles and our phones making sure that students are safe going to class,” Howard said. “And then they escalated the brutality. Every single day they taunted us. From their rental trucks, they would do things like — the agents that they brought to the Twin Cities — these hapless, untrained, overly-militarized agents, were in hotel rooms where they did not detain the workers in those hotel rooms because they wanted to be served by immigrants.”
The growing involvement of members of teacher unions and the unions themselves in political movement has garnered greater scrutiny in the past few months. Last month, it was reported that the National Education Association, one of the largest teacher’s unions, funneled millions of dollars into left-leaning organizations.
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