Minnesota
New Minnesota law allows adoptees to get original birth records
New Minnesota adoption law begins in July
Beginning July 1, adoptees born in Minnesota can get a copy of their original birth records, which show their name at birth and place at birth and the names of their biological parents.
ST. PAUL, Minn. (FOX 9) – Growing up, Joe Duea knew he was adopted, but he never knew his birth mother.
He always assumed when he turned 18, he could get his original birth records, but that won’t be the case until next month.
“Super excited to actually see it on an official document, which would be a pretty amazing thing to me,” Duea told FOX 9.
Beginning July 1, adoptees born in Minnesota can get a copy of their original birth records, which show their name at birth and place at birth and the names of their biological parents.
Under current law, birth parents can fill out an affidavit to decide whether to provide or restrict access to those records, but the affidavits will expire at the end of the month.
“I think it’s highly important in a sense to help with their identity and the fact that their story is their story and I guess, it’s nice to be able to tell it a little bit more fully,” Duea said.
Once the new law goes into effect, people who place children up for adoption will be able to fill out a new form indicating whether they want to be contacted, contacted through an intermediary or not contacted at all.
But those preferences won’t prevent adoptees from getting their birth records.
“We’re not out to harm anybody. We’re not to make anybody’s lives difficult. We just want to know where we came from,” Duea said.
Duea was able to track down his mother using DNA and Ancestry.com, but only after she was 10 years into dementia.
He says learning part of his backstory was important to him and his family and he believes the new law will make it easier for other adoptees to do the same.
“I think actually just having some of that history, or at least pathway back to where I came from is great. It’s gigantic,” Duea said.
Minnesota will become the 15th state to have unrestricted access to birth records.
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Minnesota
Northwest Minnesota Foundation awarded $200,000 for child care economic development
BEMIDJI — The Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development recently announced over $1.4 million in child care economic development grants, including a $200,000 award to the
Northwest Minnesota Foundation
in Bemidji.
Split between 11 programs and organizations around the state, more than 80% of the awarded funds support programs in Greater Minnesota, with the aim of creating more than 1,100 new child care slots.
“Affordable, reliable child care is essential for a thriving economy,” DEED Commissioner Matt Varilek said in a release. “These grants are supporting working families by ensuring Minnesota parents are able to work knowing their child is well cared for by some of the best caregivers in the nation. We’re also helping employers retain talent and working together to establish the foundation for long-term economic vitality.”
DEED’s Child Care Economic Development Grant program provides funding to organizations and communities to invest in new or expanding child care businesses, including facility improvements, worker training, attraction, retention and licensing, and other strategies to address the child care shortage.
Since the office’s inception in July 2023, DEED has awarded over $13 million in grants to 56 organizations to fund child care startups or business expansions, resulting in over 4,000 new child care slots.
Minnesota
Minnesota voter registration review finds county record errors
A new state evaluation found Minnesota’s voter registration system mostly works as intended, but some counties did not update their records accurately.
On Wednesday, the Office of the Legislative Auditor published a summary of new voter registration applications submitted in the summer and fall of 2024. The findings stated counties processed 96% of new applications within the legal time frames, but struggled to process applications when recieved within 20 days of an election.
The report also said counties did not always update voter registration records as required by law when the Office of the Secretary of State flagged possible disqualifying conditions, such as incarceration. Counties sent required notices within 10 days to 84% of registered voters whose incarceration or guardianship challenges they removed.
The report goes on to say counties followed the identity verification process correctly for 99.9% of applicants and followed the residency verification process correctly for 99% of applicants. But among applicants counties manually reviewed for residency, counties either inaccurately assigned voter statuses or failed to document their rationale in more than one-third of the cases reviewed.
The Secretary of State maintains the Statewide Voter Registration System, while counties are responsible for creating and maintaining their own voter registration records. As of January of 2026, nearly 3.8 million people were registered to vote in Minnesota.
Top officials respond
Reaction to the report from Minnesota leaders has been mixed, with some top Republicans saying Secretary of State Steve Simon is to blame for inactive voters being left on voter rolls.
However, Simon’s takeaway from the evaluation was mostly positive, saying, “the report found our office has established the appropriate procedures for counties and that counties have performed their work with a nearly perfect record of accuracy.”
Cory Kampf, president of the Minnesota Association of County Officers, said counties generally agreed with the recommendations but asked for more context. He added voter residency was verified in 99% of applications, following the correct processes.
Speaker Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, and Leader Harry Niska, R-Ramsey, full statement reads: “This voter registration audit exposes major loopholes in our system, including the thousands of votes that were allowed to register and cast a ballot on Election Day but couldn’t be verified as legal voters. It also showed that the Secretary of State does not follow the law for inactive voters, choosing to leave voters on the rolls years after they should have been deactivated. These are major problems that need to be addressed. Integrity in elections is paramount, and Minnesotans deserve certainty that only legal voters are deciding our elections.”
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