Minnesota
Minnesota business leaders brainstorm ways to grow economy

MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – At a time when Minnesota has the bottom unemployment price of any state ever, how can the state proceed to develop companies and convey new key gamers into totally different industries?
A gaggle of enterprise leaders aimed to reply that query throughout a spherical desk dialogue Thursday.
Companies have confronted problem after problem lately, from unrest to COVID-19.
“We’re popping out of the darkest days of the pandemic. We knew that a lot of the pandemic had disrupted our financial system,” mentioned Steve Grove, commissioner of the Minnesota Division of Employment and Financial Improvement.
Enterprise leaders hope to develop Minnesota financial system
At a time when many companies do not have sufficient staff, Minnesota leaders are hoping to develop key industries to draw new workers.
At a spherical desk Thursday, enterprise leaders got here collectively to speak about methods to develop Minnesota’s financial system over the subsequent decade. Their dialogue got here the identical week the governor’s financial council outlined its 10-year financial plan.
“We’d like each employee we are able to get on this financial system. We’d like each alternative we are able to get,” mentioned Paul Williams, president and CEO of Venture for Satisfaction in Residing.
One of many principal focuses was on addressing systemic boundaries so that folks from all backgrounds can begin and develop their companies.
It’s a narrative Jazz Hampton, CEO of Turnsignl, and his enterprise companions know all too nicely.
Their app, Turnsignl, launched final 12 months. When somebody is pulled over, the app connects them to an lawyer 24/7 365. The concept was born out of a necessity they noticed of their neighborhood.
“What I see is a narrative of Turnsignl, of three black males leaving their skilled careers to start out a enterprise,” Hampton mentioned. “It is not straightforward to depart a job as an lawyer at a nationwide regulation agency to do that and to take the chance.”
The enterprise leaders pressured there extra assets must be given towards individuals of coloration to take that very same danger, by way of start-up grants or different means. There additionally must be investments in issues like baby care, broadband and innovation.
“We now have traditionally low unemployment in Minnesota. Productiveness’s going to be an enormous a part of the formulation, and that’s the reason expertise funding is so necessary,” mentioned Scott Burns, CEO and co-founder of Structural.
One other thought Burns threw round was the significance of getting higher advertising and marketing of the state.
“Minnesota has actually good merchandise and options generally, however we perhaps aren’t telling the story of them sufficient. It’s important to promote them, market them, join individuals to them,” Burns mentioned. “I feel to place it merely I might prefer to drive to South Dakota and see a billboard for Minnesota.”

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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