Watch This: Governor Dayton unveils opioid action plan

Banner: Office of Governor Mark Dayton

February 15, 2018                                                                                Bookmark and Share


Dayton unveils opioid action plan

opioids kare11

Kare 11 | February 14, 2018

“Every year, thousands of Minnesotans become addicted to opioids, and hundreds of them lose their lives due to their addictions,” said Governor Mark Dayton in a letter included in the Action Plan. “Our Administration has already taken aggressive steps to reduce the flow of illicit opioids, improve treatment options, and support the people and areas affected. But we must do far more to save lives and reduce the terrible harm to our communities. We must take decisive action in this Legislative Session to reduce abuses and to ensure that all Minnesotans suffering from these addictions receive the treatment and support they need.”

Among those to support the legislative plan was Republican Representative Dave Baker of Willmar, who lost a child to a heroin overdose in 2011. “I don’t want to see other families go through what my family went through when we lost our son to an opioid addiction,” Baker told reporters. 


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Dayton leads bipartisan call for a tax on prescription opioids

Star Tribune | February 14, 2018

Gov. Mark Dayton and a bipartisan group of lawmakers called for a tax on prescription opioids Wednesday, proposing that the money raised be used to alleviate the epidemic that killed nearly 400 Minnesotans in 2016.

Dayton was joined at a Wednesday news conference by Rep. Dave Baker, R-Willmar, and Sen. Chris Eaton, DFL-Brooklyn Center, who both lost children to opioid addiction. “I don’t want to see other families go through what my family went through when we lost our son,” Baker said.

The plan would tax prescription opioids a penny on each milligram of active ingredient in a pain pill. The proceeds, estimated to be about $20 million per year, would go toward prevention, emergency response, treatment and recovery, and law enforcement.

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Clean energy jobs are booming in Minnesota

Yale Climate Connections | February 14, 2018

Clean energy takes a lot of work – and that’s good news for Minnesota’s job market.

Mast: “This rapid transition to cleaner and more sustainable energy is driving significant job growth all across the state.”

That’s Gregg Mast of Clean Energy Economy Minnesota. He says clean energy and energy efficiency jobs grew almost four times faster than all other job types in the state between 2015 and 2016.

Now, more than 57,000 Minnesotans work in these fields. Most are employed in energy efficiency – for example, installing high-efficiency appliances or constructing energy-efficient buildings.

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Met Council: Light Rail-Adjacent Development Up $1.6 Billion Last Year

5 Eyewitness News | February 14, 2018 

The Metropolitan Council says developers have added $8.4 billion in investment along current and potential metro light rail corridors since the transit-ways were added to the Twin Cities landscape.

The agency says that number could be higher as many projects along the lines,  including 24 of 41 project on the Blue Line, have not yet publicly disclosed their project value, according to a release. 

The Met Council says it tracks proposed, under construction or completed developments along the existing Green and Blue lines and their proposed extensions.

"In the past year alone, we have seen an increase of $1.6 billion for a total of $8.4 billion in development along LRT lines," Met Council Chair Alene Tchourumoff said, according to the release. "Businesses and developers choose proximity to light rail because they know that residents and workers of all ages are increasingly demanding access to transit – whether for housing, work, school, or entertainment."

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Groundbreaking For U’s $108M Health Sciences Center

WCCO | February 13, 2018

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — University of Minnesota students working on careers in health will have a new state of the art place to study.

A ceremonial groundbreaking was held Tuesday for the Health Sciences Education Center at the corner of Harvard and Delaware streets.

The Minnesota Legislature approved funding for the $108 million facility during last year’s special session.

Donors are also helping to pay for it.

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