Minneapolis, MN
Violence interrupter who made threatening statements to City Council could get new contract

The Rev. Jerry McAfee, the north Minneapolis pastor who made threatening statements last month to Minneapolis City Council members, could get a new one-year city contract of nearly $650,000 to interrupt violence.
The situation became more complicated Friday when one of McAfee’s 21 Days of Peace violence interrupter workers was arrested for reckless endangerment in connection with an incident Monday in north Minneapolis where he was shot, McAfee told the Minnesota Star Tribune.
According to a police report, the 35-year-old man fired back when he was shot after helping serve a 21 Days of Peace meal near 36th and Penn avenues. He was wearing a bulletproof vest, McAfee said, and struck by bullets after people came out from behind bushes and began shooting at 21 Days of Peace workers.
Violence interrupters working for the city aren’t allowed to be armed, McAfee said. But they were working on a state contract, had logged off for the day and the man was carrying a legal firearm, he said. McAfee said he went with him Friday to give police a statement, and the violence interrupter ended up in jail.
“I know he shot back, but let me ask you a question: If somebody is shooting at you, hit you and you got a gun, what you gonna do?” McAfee said.
McAfee’s Salem Inc. now is on a list of six nonprofits chosen by Neighborhood Safety for violence interruption contracts under a program called MinneapolUS. The one-year contracts come with a two-year renewal option but they must first get City Council approval, which should make for an interesting debate given McAfee’s remarks to the council last month.

Minneapolis, MN
For the first time in years, enrollment rises at Minneapolis and St. Paul schools

As for this year’s enrollment boost, Minneapolis said in a statement: “Minneapolis Public Schools is excited to see data showing higher student placements at several of our schools. We have been working for many years to attract and retain as many students as we can.”
St. Paul has given special attention to lifting the numbers at six schools, and has reported growth at five of them, including Riverview Spanish/English Dual Immersion on the West Side.
Kindergartners listen during science class at Riverview Elementary School in St. Paul on Thursday. (Renée Jones Schneider/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
St. Paul and Minneapolis have long battled for market share in a competitive environment that includes charter schools and nearby districts, the latter of which have schools that students can attend though open enrollment. Last year, the city of St. Paul had 51,296 school-aged children, and St. Paul Public Schools enrolled 60% of them, the district has said.
This school year, the district reported having 31,496 kids in grades K-12 on Oct. 1, a 2% increase over the previous year, according to the MDE.
Concerns over stubborn slides in St. Paul spurred a 2018 agreement to have teachers union members go door-to-door in the summer to try to recruit students. Now, the district is in the third year of a campaign — again aided by the union and others — initially focused on billboards and other districtwide strategies before landing on six schools deemed ripe for growth.
St. Paul dedicated $350,000 to the first two years of the campaign and $75,000 this year, spokesperson Erica Wacker said. Just as important, she added, is having leaders like Stivaliss Licona-Gervich, the principal at Riverview, who are willing to give even their spare time to spreading the word about their schools.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis cancels planned iftar, citing separation of church and state

Minneapolis City Council members have canceled a planned iftar, after city officials raised concerns that it would blur the line between church and state.
The city’s four Muslim council members had planned a community iftar for Friday — a meal breaking the Ramadan fast. They advertised it as an interfaith gathering, hosted in the Public Service Building in downtown Minneapolis.
According to a city spokesperson, the city attorney’s office told council members they couldn’t host a religious event with public funds in a public building.
“This prohibition applies regardless of religion — whether this was an Iftar, Seder, or a Lenten fish fry, the advice would have been the same: City resources can’t be used for religious events,” city spokesperson Jess Olstad wrote in a statement.
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City Council member Aurin Chowdhury said at Friday’s council meeting that the cancellation was disappointing.
“We’re going to work towards postponing and doing an event with community partners,” Chowdhury said. “We are not going to stop what we were going to do, and breaking bread and being a part of bringing our communities together.”
An evening iftar meal is served after sunset to break fast following prayers midway through Ramadan. For Muslims, Ramadan is a holy month for fasting, prayer and time with loved ones.
Judy Griesedieck for MPR News | 2023
Olstad said nothing would prevent council members from hosting iftar off city property with other funds.
Mayor Jacob Frey wrote in a post on X that his administration made the right legal call — and pushed back against claims of bias.
“Implications that my office intervened to shut down this Iftar celebration — and did so out of anti-Muslim bias — are both outrageous and untrue,” Frey wrote. “Separation of religion and state is a bedrock principle of our democracy and a legal requirement.”
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis College launches program to train women for jobs in trades

A Twin Cities college wants to help put women in high-demand, good-paying jobs that might not be on their radar, and much of the cost of taking classes and getting trained will be covered thanks to a new pilot program.
Working with her hands feels natural for Rachel Fulgham. The former baker loves to create from scratch. But a few years ago, she traded in flour and ovens for steel and mills.
She’s learning to be a CNC machinist at Minneapolis College. They program large machines to cut, shape, and design parts. While the mill was hard at work carving a chunk of metal into a vice stop, she used a file to clean up one that was recently finished to its exact specifications. Ensuring the final product is perfect is a part of the process Fulgham appreciates.
“My fiancé is a machinist and so for years, hearing him talk about his day, I thought ‘I could do that’,” she said. She’s out to prove it at Minneapolis College, a school out to prove that women have a place in the trades.
“It is broadening that menu of career options for them in a meaningful way,” said Vincent Thomas, the Dean of Business and Economics and Trade Technologies.
Several women are currently grinding their way to becoming welders. Other trade programs at the college include HVAC (Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning), bicycle assembly and repair technician, aircraft maintenance technician and CNC machinist.
This semester, Fulgham is the only woman in her class. “It’s doable, but it would have been nice to have other women in there and made me feel less alone and less singled out, maybe a little bit,” she said.
Filling the trade programs with more women is a constant mission for the college. “If women students look at the occupation, or they look at our students and they don’t see anyone who looks like them, or they don’t see other women finishing the program, starting a career, having success, it becomes this difficult cycle to break,” said Thomas.
To spark some change, a new pilot program at the college was introduced called “We Thrive Women in the Trades.” The program received $200,000 in funding from the Women’s Foundation of Minnesota. The goal is to recruit women while also helping pay for their tuition, transportation and even childcare.
“If your primary concern is cost, or affordability, or going into to debt to finance your education, this program will literally remove that obstacle,” said Thomas.
Within two years, graduates will be certified for their respective trade where future worksites often mirror the classroom they just left.
Adrianna Affolter is a CNC machinist at Johnstech across town. She builds microchip testers using familiar equipment and training from her time at Minneapolis College. What started as an internship is now her full-time job.
“I love what I do for a living. I want to keep learning . . . going back to school, getting my engineering degree,” she said.
If her success wasn’t enough encouragement, she hopes the new pilot program motivates women to give trades a chance.
“It’s just a great opportunity,” she said. “There is no excuse. If you want to do it, go for it. Here is the help.”
Already following Affolter’s path is Fulgham. In a few months, her internship at Johnstech will also turn into a job, and more importantly, a career.
“I’m really looking forward to just being part of the CNC industry and doing it full time for hopefully the rest of my life,” Fulgham said.
We Thrive Women in the Trades starts in Fall 2025. To learn more about the pilot program, click here.
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