Ward 4 Newsletter - May 10, 2024

Council Member LaTrisha Vetaw

Ward 4 Bulletin from Council Member LeTrisha Vetaw

May 10, 2024

Hello, Ward 4!

Welcome Mayna Patel from Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative!

Mayna Patel

Please join us in welcoming to our office Mayna Patel from the Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative. Mayna will be working in our office for the month of May learning about local government and community engagement.

Mayna is from Malaysia where she works for the Ministry of Youth. Mayna organizes nation-wide programs to bring awareness to young-adult related topics and carry out youth empowerment, leadership and capacity building workshops.

Mayna will be with our office until the end of this month, so make sure to stop by and say hi!


Loring Elementary Cinco de Mayo Celebration

Loring Elementary Cinco de Mayo Celebration

Last week was Loring Elementary's Cinco De Mayo Celebration which I was honored to be invited to. 

It was a celebration of all things Latin American with costumes, music, and dancing from all different countries. It was clear that the students had been practicing for months and it was very well attended by family, friends, and community members. 

Thank you for the invitation and a job well done to the Loring Elementary students and staff!


2024 State of the City Address

Ward 4 Team at the State of the City Address

This week, the Ward 4 Team attended Mayor Frey's 2024 State of the City Address at the NorthStar Center in downtown Minneapolis. The address highlighted the city's record-setting affordable housing production over the past six years, current arts and vibrant storefronts work to revitalize downtown, the Southside Community Safety Center, police reform, the importance of our City workforce, and a high-level forecast of the budgeting process for 2025.


New Business Alert: Lucy's Colorful Dress Closet

Lucy's Colorful Dress Closet

Please join me in welcoming Lucy's Colorful Dress Closet to Ward 4! They opened a couple months ago and they offer a curated memorable shopping experience with vintage, modern, new and pre-loved, ethnic, imported and cultural dresses. 

Lucy's Colorful Dress Closet is located at 2802 West Broadway and their hours are M-W By Appointment, Th & F 10:30 am-7pm, Sa 10 am-7 pm, Su By Appointment. Call 612-404-6721 for appointments.


CPKC Empress 2816 Steam Train

CPKC 2816 steam train

CPKC's Empress 2816 steam train passed through Ward 4 during its final North American tour.

"The Empress" was built in 1930 and was restored by a unique group of railroaders for a once-in-a-lifetime cross-continent trip starting in April 2024 to celebrate the one-year anniversary of CPKC. 

Thank you CPKC for letting us see her before the rest of her tour!


Honorary Resolution recognizing May as Community Action Month

CM Vetaw CM Koski and Dr. Hightower

This week, I presented Dr. Hightower, the Executive Director of Community Action Partnership of Hennepin County, with an honorary resolution declaring May as Community Action Month.

CAP-HC helps people with lower incomes meet their basic needs, build stability, and set out on their path to prosperity through a variety of programs and services.

I am proud to serve as the board's Vice-Chair and grateful for the opportunity to recognize the great work CAP-HC does for our communities.


To schedule a meeting or phone call with me

If you want to schedule a meeting or phone call with me, reach out to Maggie Kohl via email maggie.kohl@minneapolismn.gov or leave a message at 612-673-2204

If you have questions, comments, or concerns please contact Betsy Brock via her email betsy.brock@minneapolismn.gov or cell 612-257-5242

You can also reach me directly at my email latrisha.vetaw@minneapolismn.gov


Friday Office Hours

As most of you know, I have open office hours every Friday at my ward office at 4205 Webber pkwy.

Please feel free to stop in any time between 10 am to 2 pm or email maggie.kohl@minneapolismn.gov to set up another time.


Table of Contents


Free Legal Clinic at Harrison Neighborhood Association

Free legal CLinic flyer

Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid has an in-person clinic in the Harrison neighborhood, offering free legal help! Legal Aid handles problems on this civil side (not criminal), including: housing, consumer, immigration, federal tax, public benefits, family law, and disability discrimination. Generally, clients must be Hennepin residents and be either lower income or aged 60+ (regardless of income). Address: Harrison Neighborhood Association (HNA),1501 Glenwood Ave, Minneapolis. Days / Hours: Tues and Thurs, 10 - 3, walk-ins welcome / appointments preferred. To schedule an appointment, call 612-352-9778. Residents can also call Legal Aid's central intake line: 1-877-696-6529 or visit their website: www.mylegalaid.org


Tax Information

Navigating federal and state taxes can be difficult, but you don't have to do it alone! Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid's Low Income Taxpayer Clinic hosts twice-monthly Facebook Live presentations where you can ask your questions about important tax issues facing you and your community.  Join Legal Aid's LITC Clinic Director Aisha Servaty on Monday May 13th at 12:00PM to learn about what to do when you owe the IRS but can't afford to pay; you have options when it comes to resolving your tax debts.  On Monday May 27th at 12:00PM come learn about how to request tax penalties be removed, allowing you to reduce the total amount you owe to the IRS.  Can't watch the live presentation?  Don't worry!  All presentations are available to watch later on Legal Aid's Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/LegalAid/videos and YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/@mid-minnesotalegalaid3966/videos


Mayor Frey nominates Michelle Phillips to serve as director of Civil Rights

Mayor Jacob Frey, in consultation with City Operations Officer Margaret Anderson Kelliher, has nominated Michelle Phillips to be the City’s new director of the Minneapolis Department of Civil Rights. Phillips currently serves as inspector general for the City of Oakland, California.

Phillips has a deep expertise in civilian oversight of police, providing leadership in the promotion of constitutional policing and building departmental infrastructure to ensure thorough and fair investigative processes. Prior to her service in Oakland, Phillips served as deputy inspector general with the City of Baltimore, leading an investigative team focused on rooting out fraud and abuse and building trust in local government.

If approved for the position of Civil Rights director, Phillips will oversee a department with 46 employees tasked with:

  • Enforcing the Minneapolis Code of Ordinances.
  • Investigating discriminatory practices.
  • Ensuring the protection of members of protected classes.
  • Promoting the understanding of civil rights among residents, businesses and government.

The Civil Rights Department, through its Office of Police Conduct Review, also plays a critical role in reform efforts required by the settlement agreement reached with the Minnesota Department of Human Rights.

The mayor’s nomination has been referred to the City Council to schedule a public hearing for consideration. Once confirmed, she would begin in July.

Read more about the nomination on the City website.


How to improve neighborhood air quality

Outdoor air quality affects our health. The City of Minneapolis is recognizing National Air Quality Awareness Week by highlighting programs it uses to track local air quality and give tips to community members to improve neighborhood air quality.

Outdoor air quality affects health

Air quality issues can affect everyone, especially those living with asthma or other breathing challenges. Minnesota is fortunate to generally enjoy good air quality. However, some communities are disproportionately affected by air pollution, including people earning lower incomes and people in Black communities, Indigenous communities, and communities of color.

Recreational fires: Follow the law and be a good neighbor

Residential wood burning accounts for 55% of Minnesota’s tiny pollution particles in the air. The tiny particles are small enough to be breathed in and even enter the bloodstream affecting a person’s health. When having a fire in your yard, consider your health, your family’s and your neighbors’.

 Recreational fire laws

  • Avoid burning when Minneapolis is under an air pollution advisory. Fires release fine particles that contribute to air pollution and are implicated in health problems including strokes, heart attacks and asthma. Sign up for air quality alerts from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.
  • Outdoor recreational fires are permitted between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m.
  • Keep fires small: less than 3 feet in diameter and 2 feet high.
  • Burn only untreated, unpainted, dry wood. Never burn cardboard boxes, trash or debris, because the smoke can be toxic.
  • Have a hose or fire extinguisher present.

Learn more about City regulations around recreational fires.

For more information on recreational fires or to register a complaint about a recreational fire, call or email 311. To register a complaint about a recreational fire outside 311 hours, call 911.

Read more on the City website.


Seasonal hydrant maintenance

In Minneapolis, City-owned fire hydrants are flushed each year between May and October. Hydrant flushing removes mineral deposits from the water mains. It is also provides an opportunity to make sure hydrants are in working order.

Because flushing stirs up mineral deposits, it can temporarily discolor the tap water. The water is safe for drinking and bathing. However, to avoid staining clothing, we recommend waiting an hour or so and checking to see the water has returned to normal before doing laundry.

Get notified

You can sign up for notifications about water hydrant flushing in your area. Sign up for notifications. Make sure to create a full Smart911 profile online to register your address for location-based notifications like this.

Read more about what to do when hydrants in your area are being flushed.


Minneapolis will celebrate National Night Out Aug. 6

National Night Out is a time for City residents to come together and celebrate with neighbors. Many blocks in Minneapolis take this opportunity to reconnect, eat and build relationships while kids play and bike freely on a closed street. Our goal this year is to increase participation.

Register your event by July 30

Registration is now open, and it’s free. Sign up early. Registration closes July 30, five days before the event.

Some points to consider:

  • Register only one event per block, so confirm with your neighbors who will be registering.
  • Consider whether you want your street blocked off to traffic.
  • Ask neighbors for help organizing your event.
  • Call 311 to request a fire truck, MPD K9, and/or MPD Mounted Patrol.

Contact the City crime prevention specialists with questions.

Register your block.


Neighborhood Day is this Saturday

Plan to join in Neighborhood Day this Saturday, May 11. Neighborhood Day is an annual day set across the city to increase resident participation in local civic engagement through one of the city’s 70 recognized neighborhood organizations. Neighborhood organizations host a neighborhood engagement activity and or board elections to increase resident participation in their neighborhood organizations.

Picture the neighborhood you want to live in and then help make that vision a reality by becoming involved in your neighborhood organization. Learn more about your neighborhood organization by attending a Neighborhood Day event. Examples of 2024 Neighborhood Day events include neighborhood meet and greets, garden tool swaps, youth choir concerts, happy hours and neighborhood cleanup.

Your voice is important

Neighborhood voices are important for equity, but typically fewer than 1% of eligible people vote for neighborhood organization boards. Neighborhood boards are important local forces for change; they make investments and decisions about the community. Voting in board elections can help make sure the board members making these decisions and setting priorities for neighborhood organization activities represent voters on the most local level.

Neighbors are invited to come find out how they can help make their neighborhood better – including neighbors who haven’t been involved before. This will help neighborhood organizations better represent their neighborhoods for more equitable, accessible services.

Look up your neighborhood organization to find updated listings and see if your neighborhood is holding an event or an election this year.

If you don't know which neighborhood you live in, you can look it up by address.

Find more information about neighborhood board elections on the City website.

Find more information about Neighborhood Day on the City website.


Career fair May 22

Join the City of Minneapolis for a free networking event on not just landing a job but building a career.

Get tips on job searching, building your resume, writing a cover letter and interviewing.

  • Get a free professional headshot/photo.
  • Meet with hiring managers.
  • Enjoy a free lunch.

HR Bridges career fair 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Wednesday, May 22 CareerForce Center, 800 W. Broadway

Learn more about jobs at the City on the City website.


City Council confirms Timothy Sexton as director of City’s Public Works Department

The City Council approved Mayor Jacob Frey’s nomination of Timothy Sexton to be the City’s new director of the Public Works Department. Sexton served as the assistant commissioner for sustainability, planning and program management for the Minnesota Department of Transportation.

Sexton began his new role with Public Works May 6, overseeing a department with approximately 1,100 employees that build, operate and maintain the City’s public infrastructure and deliver critical services, such as solid waste and recycling collection, safe drinking water, street maintenance and emergency sewer and road repairs.

At MnDOT, Sexton leads a staff of 350 people and provides strategic direction for all modal programs (freight, rail, waterways, aeronautics, transit, walking, biking, shared mobility), research and innovation, asset management, and sustainability and public health.

Read more on the City website.


May is Mental Health Awareness Month

If you join in Mental Health Awareness Month by wearing green, tag us on Facebook or X and use #GoGreenMinneapolisMHAM to show your support.

Resources for mental health

Physical health benefits your mental health

Regular physical activity can lower stress, reduce symptoms of mental health conditions, and improve sleep, which further improves mental health. Remember that helpful physical activity includes stretch breaks, five-minute walks, standing and dancing.

Read more.


Community safety centers update, online meeting May 22

City staff continue to meet with the south Minneapolis community about the South Minneapolis Community Safety Center and the Lake Street Community Safety Center. Staff are also talking to people on the street about the two community safety centers. The information will help decide on what services could be in the community safety centers.

Upcoming for people in south Minneapolis, staff will talk with:

    • People who identify as Oromo May 4.
    • The Latino business community May 4.
    • Older adults May 6.
    • People who identify as African American May 8.
    • People who identify as LBGTQIA+ May 14. We anticipate a big turnout for this event. To manage capacity, we ask that you please sign up. This will help us ensure we have food, supplies and staff for people who attend.
  • People living with disabilities who live in, work in, and visit south Minneapolis and agencies that work with them May 15. This conversation is part of the monthly meeting of the Minneapolis Advisory Committee on People with Disabilities.
  • Residents of Hale, Page and Diamond Lake neighborhoods at their monthly community association board meeting May 20.
  • Residents of the Field, Regina and Northrop neighborhoods at their monthly board meeting June 19.

Please note some dates and times may change. Please go to the community safety center website for the most up-to-date information.

Online meeting May 22

An online meeting about services in the South Minneapolis Community Safety Center will be held May 22. Everyone who lives and works in south Minneapolis is welcome, but an RSVP is required.

Survey

Residents and businesses in south Minneapolis neighborhoods that will be served by the community safety centers should watch their mail for postcards arriving in early May. We hope to hear from everyone who works in and/or lives in the area served by the South Minneapolis Community Safety Center.

Stay tuned for reports on events that staff have recently attended.

Check out the City’s website for more information.


Minneapolis City Council passes amendment to commercial tobacco ordinance

The Minneapolis City Council passed a comprehensive amendment to the tobacco ordinance April 25. The amendment makes the minimum per-pack price of cigarettes one of the highest in the country and ends price discounts. It focuses on reducing health disparities and on youth initiation of commercial tobacco products, and it protects the health of the city’s residents as a whole. The ordinance includes:

  • Increasing the minimum per-pack price of cigarettes and other commercial tobacco products to $15.
  • Ending price discounts and coupons for commercial tobacco products.
  • Increasing the penalties for licensees that violate City policy.
  • Ending the sampling “loophole” for any new commercial tobacco products shop.

An increase in prices is known to decrease commercial tobacco use.

  • For every 10% increase in the price of cigarettes, adult smoking decreases by 3-5% and youth smoking decreases by 6-7%.
  • An increase in price leads to more attempts to quit.
  • Calls to quit lines increase when prices increase.
  • A study that looked at raising the state-level minimum price of cigarettes by an average of $2 per pack projected a resulting reduction in cigarette consumption by 15.9%.

Read more on the City website.


City plan on housing, community development open for comments; public hearing May 14

The draft 2024 Minneapolis Consolidated Action Plan is posted for public comments through May 21, and the public hearing will be held May 14. The plan describes the City’s housing and community development strategies for residents with low and moderate incomes.

Goals of the Minneapolis Consolidated Plan

  • Provide decent affordable housing.
  • Develop housing and services for people experiencing homelessness.
  • Provide special needs housing.
  • Expand economic opportunities.
  • Improve neighborhood conditions.

2024 Consolidated Plan Action Plan public hearing 1:30 p.m. before the Business, Housing and Zoning Committee Tuesday, May 14 Public Service Center, 250 Fourth St. S., Room 350

Find out how to participate in a public hearing on the City website or call 311.

If you’re unable to attend this public hearing, you can send written comments by May 21 to Rachel Kennedy Boehm.

See the draft plan and learn more on the City website.


Minneapolis water meets new federal standards for PFAS

The City of Minneapolis is proud to provide city residents and businesses with safe, high-quality drinking water. You can look at monthly water quality reports at the City’s website or watch a video about how the City’s water is brought from the river to the tap.

On April 10, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the federal agency responsible for regulating drinking water, issued new standards for several per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in drinking water. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, also known as PFAS, are a large group of human-made chemicals.

PFAS are used in many products, including:

  • Nonstick cookware
  • Food packaging
  • Stain-resistant carpets
  • Fire-suppressing foam

Unfortunately, research suggests that exposure to PFAS may result in adverse health impacts. The good news for Minneapolis residents is these regulated compounds have not been detected in the Mississippi River, which is our water source, or in the finished water that we send out to your tap.

The City of Minneapolis has been monitoring for PFAS for nearly 10 years. Minneapolis tap water has always met and continues to meet the new federal standards.

For continued information about Minneapolis drinking water, watch for our annual Consumer Confidence Report. This report has data and information about various water quality metrics we provide to customers and state and federal regulators. The new Consumer Confidence Report will be posted by the end of May on the City website.


Applications open for new African American Heritage Work Group

The City is recruiting members for a newly formed African American Heritage Work Group. This body will serve as an advisory board to the City Council to document and honor African American history.

The work group will advise on the selection of 25 properties associated with Black history in the city to be surveyed for inclusion in a Minneapolis African American Historic and Cultural Context Study. At least three properties will eventually be nominated by the City for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places.

Community members who are knowledgeable on the topic of African American heritage are encouraged to apply by May 12.

Read more on the City website.


Garden tool swap event May 11

Garden tool swaps are coming up May 11. Stop by one of the seven garden tool swap locations to drop off your garden tools you don’t use anymore or to pick up garden tools you need. You do not need to bring anything to take something.

Garden tool swaps 9 a.m.-noon Saturday, May 11 Seven parks around the city:

  • North: Folwell and Harrison parks
  • Northeast: Logan Park
  • Southwest: Martin Luther King and Armatage parks
  • South: Longfellow and Lake Hiawatha parks

See what's accepted and find the park addresses.

Join and share the Facebook event.

Clean your tools

To prevent the spread of bird flu and invasive species such as jumping worms, please clean your tools and bird feeders before bringing them to a swap or before using items you took home.

Wash bird feeders, bird houses, bird baths and all tools with hot soapy water and spray them with a bleach solution or let them soak in a bleach water solution for 10 minutes. Let them completely dry before using them.

Cleaning guides will be available at each of the garden tool swap sites.


Save the date: 2024 Renter Rights Resource Fair June 4

Summer is right around the corner, and the Minneapolis Department of Regulatory Services is gearing up for a Renter Rights Resource Fair June 4. Renters and property owners will have the opportunity to connect with City staff and community organizations about renting questions, common issues and resources.

Urban League Twin Cities, Arrive Ministries and others will join City staff to help community members with topics including:

  • Overcoming maintenance issues.
  • Renter rights.
  • Understanding property owner/tenant responsibilities.
  • Housing resources for immigrants and refugees.
  • Environmental hazards in homes.

2024 Renter Rights Resource Fair 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 4 Minneapolis Public Service Building, 505 Fourth Ave. S., first floor

A free meal and interpretation services will be available.

Share the event with a neighbor and stay up to date by visiting the Facebook event.

Contact Kaylee Tracy for more information or with questions.

Contact Ward 4

Visit: minneapolismn.gov/ward4
Email: ward4@minneapolismn.gov
Phone: 612-673-2204

We've moved while work is being done in City Hall. Our office is in:

Room 100, Public Service Center
250 South 4th St.
Get directions

For reasonable accommodations or alternative format please contact 311. People who are deaf or hard of hearing can use a relay service to call 311 at 612-673-3000. TTY users call 612-263-6850. Para asistencia, llame al 311. Rau kev pab 311. Hadii aad Caawimaad u baahantahay 311.

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