Minnesota
Live updates: Evening meeting on Minnesota SRO concerns and clarification

GOP wants special session to change SRO law
Minnesota House and Senate Republicans are calling on Governor Walz to convene a special session to address concerns surrounding the state’s new school resource officers (SRO) law.
ST. PAUL, Minn. (FOX 9) – Amid a renewed call for a special session on the law covering School Resource Officers (SROs) in Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz is meeting Wednesday night with legislative leaders, the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association, Minnesota Sheriff’s Association, League of Minnesota Cities, and the Attorney General’s Office.
Earlier Wednesday, the Eagan Police Department became the latest law enforcement agency to remove its SROs from schools. Apple Valley, Maple Grove, New Hope and White Bear Lake also removed their officers this week.
Law enforcement agencies have raised the alarm in recent weeks over the law change in the last legislative session that bars SROs from using specific holds and putting students in the prone position. Officials have argued that the new law creates confusion on when and how officers can intervene in conflicts at school.
Click here for a list of agencies that have announced their plans for their SRO programs.
Wednesday evening Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison issued a clarification about the new school resource officer law.
Ellison says the new amendments to the education law recently passed do allow for officers to engage in physical contact if they are preventing bodily harm or death. Officers just can’t use the restraints outlined in the law, including the prone restraint.
“There have been significant misunderstandings about the impact of the new amendments. For example, some have interpreted the amendments as restricting SROs and school professionals from engaging in any physical contact to address non-violent behavior,” Ellison wrote in a statement of clarification. “That is not the case: professionals simply must avoid the restraints identified in Section 121A.58, namely that unless a student poses an imminent threat of bodily harm to self or others, professionals ‘shall not use prone restraint’ and ‘shall not inflict any form of physical holding that restricts or impairs a pupil’s ability to breathe; restricts or impairs a pupil’s ability to communicate distress; places pressure or weight on a pupil’s head, throat, neck, chest, lungs, sternum, diaphragm, back, or abdomen; or results in straddling a pupil’s torso.’ If a student is misbehaving in a way that does not and will not harm that student or anyone else, professionals in schools still have many tools at their disposal, including other kinds of physical contact.”
Ellison also points out trained school employees do not have to wait until someone is injured to use reasonable force.
“The law says school employees and agents ‘may use reasonable force when it is necessary under the circumstances to restrain a student to prevent bodily harm or death to the student or to another…’,” Ellison clarified. “The Legislature’s use of the word ‘prevent’ means that when a professional determines a student is about to harm themselves or another, the professional may intervene.”
Read the AG’s supplemental opinion at https://www.ag.state.mn.us/Office/Opinions/169f-20230920.pdf
“My original legal opinion last month addressed only the question of whether the recent amendments to school-discipline laws allow the use of prone restraints and other techniques in cases of imminent physical harm to self or others,” Ellison said in a statement. “Since then, I have been in conversation with a variety of stakeholders, including law enforcement, who have raised more questions in good faith. I have also seen misunderstandings of the original opinion and the law. I am issuing this supplemental legal opinion, which is consistent with the conclusions of the original opinion, in an effort to address those good-faith concerns and clarify those misunderstandings.”
House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth (R-Cold Spring) renewed a call for a special session Wednesday.
“For weeks schools, law enforcement, and legislators have been asking Governor Walz to call a special session to fix this problem and get school resource officers back to their posts,” Demuth said in a statement. “Despite encouraging comments earlier this month about working together, we’ve had just one meeting with the Governor who has continued to hold closed door meetings only including Democrat legislators. Otherwise there’s been zero meaningful progress even as the list of schools who have suspended SRO coverage continues to grow. We need the Governor to realize that explanations aren’t helping. It’s time to include all four caucuses in these discussions, come up with a solution that can pass both chambers, call a special session, and fix this for our schools.”
This is a developing story. FOX 9 will have updates on FOX 9 News at 9 and 10 p.m. and on this article as they are made available.

Minnesota
Minnesota couple searching for stolen wedding memento

Six days after their Oct. 4 wedding at Grand View Lodge, Brianne Wilbury and her husband stopped at Sociable Cider Werks, a favorite date spot. Their car still had “Just Married” on the back window.
“I look over and see a car that says ‘just married,’” Wilbury said. “I thought, oh good for them. Then I realized, that’s my car.”
Wilbury said someone pulled a white car behind theirs, broke the driver’s-side lock, removed the panel by the ignition and started the vehicle with a USB cable.
“It took them about 30 seconds, and then my car was gone,” she said.
The car was later found in the Dinkytown/Marcy-Holmes area, Wilbury said. Several items were missing, including a wood-burned wedding sign her father made and keepsakes the couple collected while living in Colorado.
“I’m happy they found the car, but you only get one of them,” Wilbury said. “My dad could make another, but it wasn’t there. It didn’t see the ceremony.”
Wilbury lost her mother when she was 10. She said the sign mattered because, “it’s not like I can ask my mom to make me a wedding present,” adding, “this was really important — to have something my dad touched and worked on.”
Wilbury says staff and patrons at the cidery tried to help.
“People were already on their phones, ready to call, and the bartender gave us a free round,” Wilbury said.
One person followed the car to try to get a license plate number, she said.
Wilbury isn’t focused on arrests; she wants the sign back.
“If someone does have it, I’d really like it back,” she said. “Even if it’s broken in two pieces — there’s always wood glue.”
“Even if they take my car, they cannot take my marriage,” she said.
Minnesota
Rural health care in Minnesota: What’s changing and why?

Minnesota
Speeding motorcyclist dies in downtown Minneapolis crash, state patrol says

A motorcyclist who crashed while leaving downtown Minneapolis was later found dead, according to the Minnesota State Patrol.
The crash happened around 1 a.m. Sunday on the ramp from Third Street to Interstate 94 west, according to the patrol’s incident report.
The 21-year-old motorcyclist from Spring Lake Park, Minnesota, was “traveling a very high rate of speed,” the patrol said, and “was later found deceased as a result of the crash.”
No other vehicles were involved. The motorcyclist has not been publicly identified.
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