Minneapolis, MN
The Twin Cities’ Immense Variation in Housing Affordability
In February, I wrote about how low and flat rents in Minneapolis were contributing to a slowdown in the city’s housing development. The city has built lots of housing in the past few years, in part enabled by recent zoning reforms, helping keep rents low. My main takeaway was that this was a good thing, especially to the extent that we could credit an expansion in housing supply for maintaining this level of affordability.
I also included an important caveat: Although Minneapolis is pretty affordable, large gaps still remain. For the city’s lower-income residents, housing is still out of reach, reflecting the limitations of market-rate housing — without further public subsidy, housing can only get so cheap.
Minneapolis’ affordability has a second caveat. While housing costs are quite low on average, patterns of housing affordability are uneven throughout the city. Different neighborhoods of Minneapolis have substantially different housing costs. And if we zoom out to the larger metropolitan area, spatial differences in housing costs are even more striking. This is an outcome of structural factors and should be seen as an important problem to address in the region.
Uneven Geography of Housing Affordability
Last July, a Minnesota-based committee for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights published a report on fair housing in the Twin Cities region. Much of the report’s focus was on “capital-A Affordable” housing, which relies on subsidies to set rents at restricted levels for moderate- and low-income residents. But the report also contained some useful information on market-wide levels of affordability.
The figure below, from that report, shows affordability at the census-tract level in the Twin Cities, for a household earning 50% of the area median income ($71,500 for a family of four, $50,000 for a household with two adults).
This map confirms that Minneapolis and St. Paul are quite affordable. In both cities, the majority of neighborhoods have lots of housing available for moderate-income households.
Yet both cities have areas where affordability declines. In St. Paul’s Macalester-Groveland and Como neighborhoods, and much of the south and southwest of Minneapolis, relatively little housing is affordable to a household at 50% of the Area Median Income (AMI). This means that a family of four earning $62,450 would be hard-pressed to find housing in these areas without spending more than a third of their income on housing costs.
Furthermore, affordability in the Twin Cities suburbs almost immediately tends to fall to very low levels (although some suburbs, including Brooklyn Center and West St. Paul, have relatively more housing that’s affordable).
Where You Can (and Can’t) Build Housing
These spatial patterns of housing affordability aren’t coincidental.
For example, the areas around Minneapolis’ chain of lakes — Lake of the Isles, Bde Maka Ska, Lake Harriet, Brownie Lake and Cedar Lake — have long been some of the most expensive and exclusive neighborhoods of the city. Parts of this area in Minneapolis, and some of the suburbs immediately bordering Minneapolis and St. Paul, had concentrations of racial covenants in the first half of the 20th century, restricting the race of potential homebuyers. These covenants have led to persistent long-term gaps in housing costs and quality, as well as the racial makeup, across neighborhoods.
Soon after a Supreme Court case made these covenants unenforceable in 1948, many of the Twin Cities’ suburbs boomed as new freeways allowed residents (who were higher income, better educated and more likely to be white) to move out of the core city into more expensive enclaves.
Today, zoning and land use regulations frequently restrict housing development in these areas, helping keep them expensive and beyond reach for many.
For example, look at Minneapolis’ built form rules, which govern the size of housing that can be built across the city. These rules were adapted as part of the city’s Minneapolis 2040 Comprehensive Plan.

Areas with any type of “Interior” zoning limit the density to duplexes and triplexes — but these are mostly unfeasible to build due to a combination of regulatory and financial barriers, meaning that these areas remain mostly single-family homes. These built-form rules cover the majority of residential land in Minneapolis’ expensive South and Southwest sides.
The arterial streets in these areas, labeled as “Corridor” zones, have more successfully allowed denser housing, but not enough has been built to change the affordability landscape of these areas. Keep in mind, too, that moderate zoning changes can’t quickly undo many decades of exclusionary policy in a neighborhood.
In the suburbs, such rules are considerably more restrictive, and they help ensure that much of the area outside of Minneapolis and St. Paul remains exclusive — both inner-ring suburbs and jurisdictions further out. For example, as journalists MaryJo Webster and Michael Corey have documented, huge majorities of suburban residential land allow only single-family housing, while only relatively tiny patches of land allow for multifamily housing (note that this map is a couple years out of date, although the broad zoning landscape hasn’t changed much).

Both the origins and the implications of these rules tie closely to race and class. You can find the following sentence printed in an April 1975 edition of the St. Paul Reporter, St. Paul’s longstanding Black-run newspaper (today a part of the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder).
“Restrictive zoning plays a major role in keeping blacks out of the suburbs. They permit whites, who generally are better off financially, to practice a kind of social and economic discrimination that clearly is un-American.”
These words ring true today.
Last April, I reported for the Minnesota Reformer on a rejected affordable housing project in Edina. The city’s mechanism for blocking this project was its zoning code. Although the development was aligned with Edina’s long-term comprehensive plan, which called for multifamily housing in this location, the city had not changed its actual zoning to allow for larger apartments. This gave Edina the leeway to stall the development, with full awareness that the developer would lose its affordable housing tax credits as a result.
The resulting exclusion has been documented more systematically, too, playing out on a scale larger than any single housing development. As Webster, the journalist, documented in further research with housing economist Salim Furth, places in the Twin Cities zoned for single-family housing typically have much larger proportions of white residents. Additional research on minimum lot sizes, another exclusionary and costly housing regulation in many Twin Cities jurisdictions, has shown sharp socioeconomic divisions driven by these rules. Today, many different kinds of restrictive suburban zoning policies uphold unequal patterns across economic and racial lines.
Looking Ahead
Minneapolis deserves credit for its successful efforts to increase housing supply through land use reforms. Any fair assessment of the city’s affordability would acknowledge that the city’s rents are quite low, as average housing costs are within reach for many people with moderate incomes.
At the same time, we shouldn’t let numbers that are pretty impressive on average obscure meaningful variation across neighborhoods. Certain areas of Minneapolis are not within reach for many of the city’s residents. Furthermore, Minneapolis’ affordability does not extend to its wealthier suburbs.
These patterns have to do with longstanding historical patterns of racial and economic segregation. Restrictive land use policy is one of the primary tools upholding these historical patterns today, driving up average housing costs and giving cities a tool to control the development of subsidized affordable housing.
Reforming these rules to allow for more housing throughout the Twin Cities is the subject of a years-long effort in the Minnesota Legislature. Proposed changes include a variety of ways to allow more density in municipalities throughout the state and to reduce the scope for cities to make discretionary rejections of proposed housing developments.
Some local governments, spearheaded by the League of Minnesota Cities, are strongly opposed to these changes. But every jurisdiction in the Twin Cities has a contribution to make when it comes to building more housing — both subsidized housing and lower-cost market-rate housing. Residents can’t afford to wait.
Related
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis Man Gets 8.5 Years For Trying To Join ISIS In Somalia
MINNEAPOLIS, MN — A 23-year-old Minneapolis man was sentenced Wednesday to 102 months in prison and 15 years of supervised release after pleading guilty to attempting to provide material support and resources to ISIS, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota.
Prosecutors said Abdisatar Ahmed Hassan tried to travel from Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport to Somalia in December 2024 to join and fight for the foreign terrorist organization.
ISIS has been designated a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. secretary of state since 2014.
According to court documents cited by federal prosecutors, Hassan consumed and reposted ISIS propaganda, obtained bombmaking and weapons-related manuals, and communicated on social media with ISIS media wings and recruiters operating in Somalia.
The U.S. attorney’s office said Hassan bought a one-way ticket, left Minneapolis for Chicago on Dec. 29, 2024, and was prevented from continuing to Somalia after an interview by Customs and Border Protection’s Tactical Terrorism Response Team.
Prosecutors said he later continued researching ISIS attacks and posting pro-ISIS content online before the FBI arrested him on Feb. 27, 2025.
Hassan pleaded guilty Sept. 29, 2025, before Judge Donovan W. Frank, who imposed the sentence on April 22.
In the announcement, FBI Minneapolis Special Agent in Charge Christopher D. Dotson said, “Abdisatar Hassan took active steps in an attempt to join and support ISIS—a brutal foreign terrorist organization responsible for the violent deaths of thousands of innocent people.”
He added that the sentence “takes a would-be terrorist off the streets and sends a clear message that the FBI and our partners will unremittingly pursue anyone seeking to join or support a foreign terrorist organization.”
This case was investigated by the FBI, the Joint Terrorism Task Force, Customs and Border Protection and the New York Police Department.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis salon mixes rock and roll with haircuts: Inside HiFi Hair and Records
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A Minneapolis salon is turning heads by mixing rock and roll with haircuts, creating a one-of-a-kind experience for music lovers.
A salon where music and haircuts go hand in hand
What we know:
HiFi Hair and Records sits on the edge of downtown Minneapolis, marked by a leopard print awning and a vibe that’s all about community through music.
“I tried to model it after a barbershop,” said Jonny Clifford, owner of the salon.
Clifford opened the shop in 2011, inspired by his father who introduced him to music and was battling terminal cancer at the time.
The salon brings together the hum of blow dryers and the sounds of rock and roll, with Clifford saying, “Music is the uniter. Most everyone who is alive today grew up on rock and roll.”
He added a record store the following year, letting customers browse new and used vinyl and CDs while waiting for their appointment.
“I jokingly refer to it as the coolest waiting room in the city,” said Clifford.
The shop is filled with memorabilia from music legends like Elvis, David Bowie and The Monkees. There’s even a wall dedicated to Minnesota’s local music scene.
Clifford said, “We’ve got Bobby V who I think never gets enough credit for his contributions to music in Minnesota.”
Clifford’s journey from punk haircuts to community hub
Why you should care:
Clifford started cutting hair in the early 1980s because he and his friends in southwest Minneapolis couldn’t afford the punk haircuts they wanted.
Now, he not only looks the part—”Ronny Wood, Jeff Beck, Keith Richards, I’m always like old Keith Richards or young Keith Richards”—but he helps others feel like rock stars too.
“People are like make me look like a rock star and that is sort of a universal term right. Everyone wants to look like a rock star,” said Clifford.
His goal is simple:
“If I can make a living and raise my family, pay my bills, have a business and be a part of a community, that is important to me. I win. That’s everything,” said Clifford.
He is passionate about giving a boost to local musicians, saying, “I think they need it more. I love Lady Gaga and The Rolling Stones, but they are doing fine. Our local people haven’t made it national yet. They could use a voice. They could use a boost, and they need to be heard.”
The salon’s rhythm is all about joy, music and community, and Clifford plans to keep it going.
“Til I kick over. I’ll probably be back standing behind the chair. And someone will complain I didn’t finish their haircut,” said Clifford.
HiFi Hair and Records continues to be a place where music and style meet, giving Minnesota’s music scene a little extra volume.
Minneapolis, MN
Edina shooting leaves 1 dead, suspects on run
EDINA, Minn. (FOX 9) – A deadly shooting in Edina sparked a massive police response and forced a lockdown at nearby businesses at Southdale Mall on Wednesday as police are searching for the suspects.
Deadly Edina shooting
What we know:
Edina police responded around 12:30 p.m. to the report of a shooting along West 66th Street near Southdale Mall.
At the scene, officers found one victim with a gunshot wound. Officers tried to revive the victim but say they ultimately died from their wounds.
Local perspective:
Police say the suspects ran from the scene. As a precaution, they advised nearby businesses to go into lockdown. FOX 9 learned that MHealth Fairview also went into lockdown procedures as a precaution.
Aerial video from the scene showed the investigation appeared to be focused around an apartment building across from the mall. Police say the apartment building is described as a transitional housing.
Avoid the area
Big picture view:
Police are asking the public to avoid the area as the investigation is underway. Officers have blocked off West 66th for the time being.
Police say they are looking for more than one suspect involved in the shooting.
What we don’t know:
Police say some people were taken into custody at the scene but it’s unclear what their role was in relation to the shooting.
Law enforcement near the 3300 block of W. 66th Street in Edina. (FOX 9)
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