Minnesota
University of Minnesota plans to retake control of its medical facilities, build new hospital
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – An enormous proposal got here from the College of Minnesota on Thursday to take again possession of its medical services and construct a brand new hospital.
It comes as Fairview Well being Providers tries to merge with Sanford Well being out of South Dakota – and just some days after Fairview floated the concept of the college taking up the campus.
That complete choice got here from Fairview this week throughout a kind of listening periods by Legal professional Common Keith Ellison on that proposed merger with Sanford Well being. The college fashioned that enterprise partnership with Fairview 25 years in the past to run the hospitals. They had been shedding cash on the time, and Fairview actually shored them up. However Thursday, College president Joan Gabel unveiled a brand new strategic plan to make sure that all state residents have entry to the U’s tutorial healthcare system.
“To realize this goal, we should personal governance and management the flagship healthcare services on our Twin Cities campus,” mentioned Gabel. “These embody the College of Minnesota Medical Middle, East and West Financial institution services, the Masonic Kids’s Hospital, and the Clinics and Surgical procedure Middle.”
Now, the strategic plan includes constructing a brand new state-of-the-art hospital there within the East Financial institution on the nook of Huron and Washington. The college has been constructing out its medical campus there previously decade and has already acquired the land for the brand new hospital there.
The college’s vp of finance says it might take about 5 years to construct this new hospital.
“We should start the planning and course of now,” mentioned Vice President Myron Franz. “We have now to evaluate group wants. We have to plan for a very nice answer and we have to safe needed public funding.”
Now, in a joint assertion Thursday afternoon from each Sanford Well being and Fairview Well being Methods, it mentioned, “We stay taken with a medical partnership between the college and the mixed Fairview-Sanford system. Regardless of repeated requests since final August, now we have not had the chance to satisfy with President Gabel or Regent Powell.”
If the college does retake management of its hospitals and clinics to construct a brand new hospital, it might want cash from the state legislature. Myron Franz mentioned Thursday he would not have a price ticket but, however he did say no state-of-the-art hospital — just like the one they’re speaking about — would price lower than $1 billion.
Minnesota
Minnesota Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson says legislative session will have 'a lot going on'
EAST GRAND FORKS — As Minnesota lawmakers head into their legislative session, working to pass the next state budget likely will be the biggest item on their agenda, according to Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson.
“Especially if we start off slow with these court cases, I’m not planning a vacation in June,” said Johnson, a Republican from East Grand Forks. “There are a lot of needs in this state — not just in my district but across the state — but given the issues with the budget right now … there’s going to be a lot going on down in St. Paul.”
The Legislature convenes Jan. 14 for its 94th session. The Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor party has a one-seat majority in the Senate, and the House of Representatives is expected to be tied at 67. While a
power-sharing agreement — with both DFL and Republican chairs
on all committees — has been discussed, two ongoing court cases mean unknowns remain on final majorities.
“We don’t know when those are going to be resolved,” Johnson said. “The House might be in a little bit of limbo trying to figure out who’s going to be leading.”
Two cases — one
regarding discarded ballots in a close representative race in Shakopee
and another challenging the residency of a Roseville representative — are working their way through Minnesota court.
If a DFL-Republican tie does end up being the case on Jan. 14, there’s legal and constitutional ambiguity about whether co-speakers of the House could exist. A tie has only happened one other time in Minnesota, in 1979. At that time, the Independent Republican Party gained the speakership and the DFL chaired the rules, taxes and appropriations committees. It created
chaotic final days of the session.
There’s also the case of Sen. Nicole Mitchell, DFL-Woodbury, who has been
accused of burglary in Becker County court and has a jury trial scheduled for the end of January.
There have been calls for her resignation, but others have stressed that she hasn’t yet had her day in court.
“So even before we get into the budget cycle, there are all these dynamics going on behind the scenes,” Johnson said. “That’s triggered some interesting conversations of a few Democrats in the Senate.”
Even disregarding the controversies, the Legislature will be tasked with creating and passing a budget for the next two-year biennium.
The last budget, passed in 2023, was only the
eighth budget in 40 years that was passed before the regular session’s
constitutional end date of the Monday after the third Saturday in May. This year, that date is May 19. If a budget isn’t passed by then, Gov. Tim Walz will have to call a special session; if a budget isn’t passed by June 30, the government will shut down. That last occurred in 2011.
With the Minnesota Management and Budget Office
saying that the state has a structural imbalance
and as costs increase for long-term care and special education, Johnson said the Legislature needs to look at policy fixes.
“There are some policy things that we could be doing going forward that would really help out and fix what the Democrats have been doing over the last two years with that extreme policy,” he said. “Minnesotans are paying for (it) every single day and we can address and make this government more effective and efficient, and we can make it cheaper and better for people in Minnesota to live here.”
Voigt covers government in Grand Forks and East Grand Forks.
Minnesota
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Minnesota
Houston takes home win streak into matchup with Minnesota Timberwolves
Minnesota Timberwolves with a record of 15-14 and ranked ninth in the Western Conference match off against Houston Rockets with a record of 21-9 and ranked second in the Western Conference. The game is in Houston at 7 p.m. CST on Friday.
Houston aims to extend its three-game home winning streak.
The Rockets have gone 13-7 against Western Conference opponents. Houston ranks fifth in the NBA with 51.5 points in the paint led by Alperen Sengun averaging 12.5.
The Timberwolves have gone 12-9 against Western Conference opponents. Minnesota scores 109.1 points and has outscored opponents by 2.2 points per game.
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The Rockets are shooting 44.3 percent from the field this season, 1.4 percentage points lower than the 45.7 percent the Timberwolves allow to opponents.
The Timberwolves are shooting 45.7 percent from the field, 2.2 percent higher than the 43.5 percent the Rockets’ opponents have shot this season.
A top performer for the Rockets is Sengun who is scoring 18.3 points per game with 10.5 rebounds and 5.2 assists.
The Timberwolves’ Anthony Edwards is averaging 25.3 points, 5.6 rebounds and four assists.
In the last ten games, the Rockets have held a record of 7-3, averaging 111.6 points, 49.3 rebounds, 21.1 assists, 6.9 steals and 5.7 blocks per game. The shooting average has been 44.6 percent from the field. Their opponents have averaged 107.7 points per game.
For the Timberwolves’ last ten games, they have had an average of 6-4, averaging 105.2 points, 45.0 rebounds, 27.0 assists, 10.2 steals and 4.5 blocks per game. They have been shooting 44.6 percent from the field. Their opponents have averaged 100.5 points.
Rockets’ Dillon Brooks has an ankle injury. Tari Eason is also on rest.
Timberwolves’ Daishen Nix and Luka Garza are out due to an ankle injuries. Joe Ingles is also injured.
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