Orchestra fi nds ‘A Grand New Beginning’ WORKSHOP WOWS

BEAT
STRESS
WORKSHOP
WOWS
Dr. Rachel offers tips to
fight workplace stress
Stuart Woodman reinvents menu
at Workshop at Union
VOICES PAGE 17
FLAVOR PAGE 15
SERVING DOWNTOWN & NORTHEAST MINNEAPOLIS
October 9–22, 2014
After a bitter lockout, the Minnesota Orchestra
is set to make up lost time this season
Orchestra finds
‘A Grand New Beginning’
BY ERIC BEST
Osmo Vänskä and the Minnesota Orchestra have returned to Orchestra Hall
to open its first season since a 15-month lockout.
The opening weekend, titled “A Grand New Beginning,” proved fitting for a
bruised orchestra under new management.
Musicians and orchestra board members signed a three-year deal in January
after more than 15 months of negotiations over compensation and the orchestra’s deficit. The orchestra’s former CEO and president, Michael Henson,
stepped down in August per the requests of the musicians and Vänskä.
Henson’s successor, Kevin Smith, began in July, and has already struck a
chord with musicians and fans.
Photo
by Greg
Helgeson
SEE ORCHESTRA / PAGE 11
2015 CITY BUDGET
CITY HALL
Community groups
City nears deal
urging city to invest in for Clean Energy
affordable housing
Partnership
BY SARAH MCKENZIE smckenzie@journalmpls.com
A group of community organizations has mobilized a campaign to lobby for $20 million for
affordable housing in the city’s 2015 budget.
The funding would include $15 million for
the city’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund, $3
million for senior housing and $2 million for
home ownership programs, said Heidi Johnson
McAllister of the Downtown Congregations to
End Homelessness.
The city’s residential building boom has
created a new supply of luxury rentals, but
affordable places to live are increasingly hard to
come by in Minneapolis.
Groups lobbying for the $20 million
for affordable housing include Habitat for
Humanity, the Alliance for Metropolitan
Stability, the Metropolitan Consortium of
Community Developers, the League of Women
Voters-Minneapolis, the Downtown Congregations to End Homelessness and Beacon Interfaith Housing Collective.
McAllister said campaign organizers
have met with all 13 City Council members
and have been in talks with Mayor Betsy
Hodges’ office.
SEE AFFORDABLE HOUSING / PAGE 9
BY SARAH MCKENZIE smckenzie@journalmpls.com
A City Council committee voted Oct. 6
to approve tentative agreements with Xcel
Energy and CenterPoint Energy to create a
new Clean Energy Partnership — a unique
collaboration designed to help Minneapolis
reach its environmental goals.
Deputy City Coordinator Jay Strobel said
the partnership is the first of its kind in the
nation and has the potential to be a “transformative agreement” for the city.
The City Council’s Health, Environment
& Community Engagement Committee
approved terms of the partnership after a
public hearing. The full Council will vote on
the partnership agreements Oct. 17.
A board made up of the mayor, two Council
members, the city coordinator and two senior
executives from the utility companies would
oversee the Clean Energy Partnership. A new
Energy Vision Action Committee made up of
a broad cross section of the community would
SEE CLEAN ENERGY / PAGE 8
2 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
Government
Civic Beat
State lawmakers raise new concerns
about increased oil train traffic
Transportation Committee Chairs Sen. Scott
Dibble and Rep. Frank Hornstein, along with
several other state legislators, have sent a letter
to the Surface Transportation Board expressing
concerns about the impact of increased oil train
traffic on passenger trains.
“In the wake of increased freight train traffic
through Minnesota from the Bakken oil fields in
North Dakota, we are concerned not only about
the safety of our constituents, but also the loss
of economic development opportunity to the
state,” they wrote.
They pointed to Amtrak’s Empire Builder
as one route facing significant delays as a
result of the spike in oil shipments. As of June
2014, Amtrak reported a 15 percent drop in
passengers on the Empire Builder because of
the delays and estimated monthly losses of $1
million.
“Given that commercial air or bus service
operating on the same route as the Empire
Builder is inadequate, this route is vital to the
transportation interests of our state and nation,”
they wrote.
Dibble and Hornstein held a joint House
and Senate hearing Sept. 30 to explore the rail
congestion problem. Representatives of businesses depending on trains to transport their
goods along with rail officials testified.
According to a Session Daily article, Brian
Sweeney, regional vice president of state government affairs for BNSF Railway, said oil trains
aren’t the only factor in the increased congestion.
“We are not prioritizing oil trains,” he said.
Increased oil train traffic has resulted in delays for passenger trains.
“Everybody’s service has suffered.”
Hornstein has also been pushing for rail
companies to implement stronger public safety
measures and environmental review protocols.
Under current law, the public doesn’t have
the right to call a freight company and ask
what cargo is being transported in train cars.
The issue has become a greater concern for
Minneapolis residents given that Southwest
Light Rail trains will be co-located next to
freight train traffic.
“People in the Kenilworth Corridor can’t just
call the railroad company and ask what is in that
train car,” he said.
Hornstein is pushing for greater transpar-
ency and requirements that oil companies
agree to speedy cleanup plans in the event of a
derailment.
During the 2014 session, Hornstein championed legislation that required train companies
to create safety plans and coordinate with local
first responders on action plans to prepare for
potential accidents. It also increased the number
of state rail inspectors and set aside money to
upgrade rail grade crossings.
Funding for the first responder training and
grade crossings will come from an annual assessment on rail and pipeline companies.
— Sarah McKenzie
Fire Dept.
facing
spike in
injuries
The Minneapolis Fire Department has experienced an increase in injuries among firefighters — a trend putting financial pressure
on a department facing other staffing challenges as more firefighters are approaching
retirement.
Minneapolis Fire Chief John Fruetel said
the department’s Worker’s Compensation
costs for injured firefighters have reached $2.4
million, nearly doubling since 2011, during a
presentation before the City Council’s Ways
& Means Budget Subcommittee Oct. 2.
Many of the injuries are related to EMS
calls, he said. Some firefighters have had back
injuries related to lifting heavy individuals.
“It is a challenge,” he said. “We are seeing
those numbers go up.”
As of July, the Fire Department had 376
firefighters and 19 in training, but more than
20 were on leave because of injuries, he said.
To keep staffing levels up the department has
had to increasingly rely on paying firefighters
overtime. The department has spent $1.6
million on overtime costs in the past year,
Fruetel said.
When asked by City Council Member
Blong Yang about the ideal staffing level for
the department, Fruetel said he’d like to have
a minimum of 418 firefighters.
SEE INJURIES / PAGE 3
journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 3
Government
Civic Beat
FIND US AT 514 E. HENNEPIN AVE.
On the corner of Hennepin & Central (Parking in rear)
Bloomington · Burnsville · Woodbury
Plans for new apartments at 2320 Colfax, now home to Healy’s Orth House, have
cleared a final hurdle. File photo
electronic cigarettes
SmokelessSmoking.com · 612.217.4550
Lander Group’s proposed
apartments for 2320 Colfax
maneuver another roadblock
The Lander Group’s proposed four-story,
42-unit apartment development for 2320
Colfax Ave. S. — a block now home to the
Healy Orth House — has cleared another
hurdle at City Hall.
The City Council’s Zoning & Planning
Committee denied an appeal of several variances for the project, including one allowing
a reduction in the minimum parking spaces
required for the project.
The Lander Group is planning to have 32
parking spaces for the apartment building
— four less than the minimum required under
the zoning code. The Planning Commission approved that variance request along
with several others Aug. 25. The developer
is working to attract tenants who aren’t car
dependent to the project by including a transit
pass in monthly rent and planning bikefriendly amenities.
A group who appealed the Planning
Commission’s Aug. 25 actions suggested
the parking reduction would have a negative
impact on the Wedge and argued the new
development does not fit the historic character of the neighborhood.
Former City Council Member Meg Tuthill
(Ward 10) also weighed in at the public
hearing, urging Council members to grant the
appeal. She said the residents in the neighborhoods will be forced to deal with extra cars in an
area already short on parking spots, particularly
in the winter.
City Council Member Lisa Bender, the
new Ward 10 Council member and chair of
the Zoning & Planning Committee, said the
Wedge residents she talked to are split on the
parking issue.
However, she pointed to research indicating
changing demographic patterns, particularly
among millennials who are opting to go car less
in greater numbers.
Bender, who lives near the block slated for
the Lander project, said she chose to live in
the neighborhood based on its walkability and
proximity to high frequency bus routes.
Council President Barb Johnson (Ward 4)
was the only committee member to vote against
the denial of the parking variance appeal. She
said city leaders should be mindful of how
transportation decisions can shift over someone’s lifetime. “I am not a millennial,” she said.
The full Council approved the committee’s
action Oct. 3.
Earlier this year, the Council voted 10-2 to
allow the Lander Group to move ahead with
plans to demolish the Healy’s Orth House,
which currently serves as a rooming house for
low-income tenants.
The Council faced intense lobbying from
preservationists, including the DIY Network’s
Nicole Curtis of the “Rehab Addict” to save
the 1893-era home from the wrecking ball. The
Queen Ann-style home was designed by noted
Minneapolis architect T. P. Healy. FROM INJURIES / PAGE 2
time last year.
Mayor Betsy Hodges’ proposed 2015 budget
for the Fire Department is about $60.2 million,
a 1.5 percent increase from this year. It includes
$50,000 for an outreach program focused on
educating Minneapolis youth about the department, $400,000 in one-time funding to help with
training and recruitment of new firefighters and
$400,000 in ongoing funding for training of new
class of firefighters each year to help with attrition challenges.
The City Council is in the midst of reviewing
department budgets and will vote on adopting
the 2015 city budget in mid-December.
“We need more depth in the department,” he
said. “Right now we are out of balance.”
The Fire Department is also aging with the
average age of firefighters at 45. “We are very
susceptible to injury,” he said.
Fruetel said the department’s calls for
service is on the rise, too, as a result of the city’s
increasing population. According to his presentation to the Council, emergency calls have
increased from 32,165 in 2009 to 38,133 in 2013.
Calls are projected to rise to 40,000 by year’s end.
Firefighters have responded to emergency
events in five minutes or less 75.2 percent of
time this year, down from 78.7 percent of the
— S.M.
Call Christopher at 612-827-5847
christopherfriend@edinarealty.com
www.christopherfriend.edinarealty.com
— S.M.
Friend, Christopher SWJ 060514 6.indd 1
6/3/14 4:40 PM
journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 5
News
Biz Buzz
FREE TASTINGS
BEER: TUESDAYS 4-7PM
WINE: FRIDAYS 4-7PM
A runner gets
his stride
analyzed at
the new Mayo
Clinic Sports
Medicine
Center. Photo
by Ben Johnson
WAREHOUSE DISTRICT
Mayo Clinic Sports
Medicine Center
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Now open
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Mayo Clinic has opened its new state-of-theart sports medicine center in the Mayo Clinic
Square development next to the Target Center.
The former home of Block E is still under
heavy construction, but on the third floor the
22,000-square-foot clinic is open for business.
The clinic will help prevent, diagnose and rehabilitate injuries and offer training programs for
healthy athletes.
On the diagnostic side, the crown jewel
is the new GE 3T wide bore MRI machine,
which was first developed by researchers at the
University of Minnesota. It’s both wider and
quieter than previous MRI machines, and uses
the strongest magnet allowed by the Federal
Drug Administration.
Digital x-ray and ultrasound machines have
the ability to immediately upload images online,
allowing staff at Mayo’s Rochester headquarters
or elsewhere to examine them and offer medical
opinions in real time.
Orthopedic surgeons will work out of the
clinic, but no surgeries will be performed onsite.
On the training side, Mayo is partnering
with EXOS, an elite sports training company
that worked with half of this year’s NFL first
round draft picks and Germany’s World Cup
champion men’s soccer team. EXOS will offer
tailored workouts, nutrition consulting and
video analysis for a number of sports.
“We’re going to take the same methods and
training techniques we have used for some of
the world’s most elite athletes and apply them
for athletes from all walks of life,” said Jennifer
Noles with EXOS.
Mayo is also partnering with the Timberwolves and Lynx, and the clinic’s workout area
will eventually overlook the teams’ new practice
facility.
Mayo plans to use the clinic for residency and
training programs. Most of the exam rooms are
outfitted with two computers and two monitors
for medical students to follow along. Also, a lot
of the exam rooms are outfitted with extra long
tables designed to fit oversized Timberwolves
and Lynx players.
The clinic employs its own full-time staff of
strength coaches, athletic trainers, physicians,
radiologists, physical therapists and other
medical professionals, but personnel from its
massive Rochester campus will regularly come
up for visits.
“We have tens of thousands of Mayo Clinic
patients living in the Twin Cities, and we
wanted to come to them and give them better
access to our care,” said Jonathan Finnoff, the
new clinic’s medical director.
— Ben Johnson
2315 18th Ave NE | 612-789-0678 | www.stinsonwbs.com
Located behind the Quarry Shopping Mall in Stinson Marketplace (we are on the corner of 18th & Stinson)
Sue Hewitson Laura Randall
Minnesota’s Largest Family-owned Independent
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ST. LOUIS PARK
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ROBBINSDALE
Val Fazendin
Corey
Robertson
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Anderson
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952-473-7000
612-232-3320
hewitsonhomes@comcast.net
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Carol Alber
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952-473-7000
612-710-1551
laura@fazhomes.com
Carol Alber & Val Fazendin
952-239-5995
612-210-5522
carol@carolalber.com
val@fazhomes.com
PLYMOUTH
HOPKINS
The Bachelor Farmer
and Askov Finlayson
Expanding
PRICE IMPROVEMENT
Brothers Eric and Andrew Dayton are expanding
their neighboring North Loop businesses by
moving Askov Finlayson into a larger space next
door, and opening a new café run by the team
behind The Bachelor Farmer in its place.
Just before its third anniversary, the sons of
Gov. Mark Dayton announced their trendy men’s
clothing retailer will move from 200 N. 1st St. to
a space in the historic Hennepin Hotel building
at 204 N. 1st St. The new location will be roughly
double the size of its current home, allowing
more space to fill online orders and expand offerings from the Askov Finlayson brand.
The new café will feature a grab-and-go lunch
items, baked goods and coffee and tea. As part
of the construction, the alley between the two
neighboring buildings will be turned into a
pocket park for the public to enjoy.
Construction is expected to begin this
winter. Askov Finlayson’s new store is
expected to open next summer and the yet-tobe-named café next fall.
“We’re thrilled to announce the expansion
of our presence in the North Loop,” said Eric
Dayton. “Having all three of our small businesses
Original Owner Home
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Well-built home near Ridgedale. Great
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952-473-7000
763-458-7924
dave@davekuck.com
MOUND
Askov Finlayson is moving into a
larger space next door to its current
spot. Submitted photo
under one roof was very valuable in the beginning, but with the momentum of the store and
our own label, the time is right to give Askov
Finlayson a proper home of its own.”
— B.J.
 More Biz Buzz on page 6
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Roger Fazendin DTJ 100914 V3.indd 1
10/6/14 10:29 AM
6 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
News
Volume 45, Issue 21
Publisher
Janis Hall
jhall@journalmpls.com
Co-Publisher and President
Terry Gahan
tgahan@journalmpls.com
General Manager
Chris Damlo
612-436-4376
cdamlo@journalmpls.com
Editor
Sarah McKenzie
612-436-4371
smckenzie@journalmpls.com
@smckenzie21
Assistant Editor
Dylan Thomas
612-436-4391
dthomas@journalmpls.com
@DThomasJournals
Staff Writers
Ben Johnson
612-436-5088
bjohnson@journalmpls.com
@johnsonbend
Michelle Bruch
mbruch@journalmpls.com
@MichelleBruch
Contributing Writer
Eric Best
Carla Waldemar
Sales Administrator
Kate Manson
612-436-5085
kmanson@journalmpls.com
Creative Director
Dana Croatt
612-436-4365
dcroatt@journalmpls.com
Senior Graphic Designer
Valerie Moe
612-436-5075
vmoe@journalmpls.com
Graphic Designer
Amanda Wadeson
612-436-4364
awadeson@journalmpls.com
Copy Editor
Zoe Gahan
zgahan@journalmpls.com
Distribution
Marlo Johnson
612-436-4388
distribution@journalmpls.com
Classified Advertising
612-825-9205
classifieds@journalmpls.com
Printing
ECM Publishers, Inc.
MSP AIRPORT
AIRPORT PLANS
3-MEGAWATT SOLAR ARRAY
Officials predict airport energy savings will exceed $25-million cost of project
BY DYLAN THOMAS dthomas@journalmpls.com
A 3-megawatt solar energy array atop two Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport parking ramps
could meet 20 percent of the airport’s peak energy
demand when it starts operating next year.
The $25.4-million project to install the array and
make other energy efficiency upgrades at the airport
will, over the coming decades, pay for itself and then
some, predicted Jeff Hamiel, executive director of
the Metropolitan Airport Commission. Construction on the array begins this fall, and it’s expected to
be supplying power to the airport in the “latter half
of 2015,” Hamiel said.
The array includes 8,700 individual solar modules
mounted on a frame on top of two parking ramps
near Terminal 1. As a part of the same project, the
airport is also replacing 7,750 light fixtures with
more-efficient LED bulbs and adding four electricvehicle charging stations to the 14 already available
in the parking areas.
The MAC hired Ameresco, a Massachusettsbased renewable energy company, to complete
the project. Ameresco President and CEO George
Sakellaris said they plan to hire more than 250 local
laborers for the job.
News
A new solar
array built
atop two
parking ramps
could supply
a fifth of
the airport’s
energy needs
by 2015.
Submitted
Photo
GreenMark, the environmental marketing
firm run by 2013 mayoral candidate Mark
Andrew, helped the MAC develop the solar
energy concept and connect with Ameresco.
Andrew said talks began about three years
ago on a project he said marked a “new era” in
renewable energy for Minnesota.
“We are on a rapid trajectory for major growth
in solar,” he said.
Gov. Mark Dayton and Will Steger, the polar
explorer and environmental advocate, also
attended the ceremony announcing the project
inside Terminal 1. The event doubled as the
Biz Buzz
SKYWAYS
SKYWAYS
New One Two Three Sushi
location
Simpls
Grab and Go
Coming soon
Now open
izable salad and rice bowl options, along
with a selection of new toppings.
One Two Three Sushi is owned by Sushi
Avenue, which provides catering for upscale
supermarkets, restaurants and food service
organizations. Sushi Avenue also operates
Masu Sushi and Robata in Northeast Minneapolis and at the Mall of America.
One Two Three Sushi hopes to open its third
location in the skyways by the end of the year.
The new restaurant will be in the skyway
of US Bank Plaza, in the former home of
TimeScape watch repair.
The fast casual sushi concept debuted in
February 2013 in a small space overlooking
IDS Tower’s Crystal Court, and since then
other locations have opened in the 50 South
Tenth office tower, downtown St. Paul and
Dinkytown.
The 2,200-square-foot space will have
space for 50 to 60 diners and feature a few
new menu items, including a mix of custom-
— B.J.
Next issue
Oct. 23
Advertising deadline:
Oct. 15
official release of the Minnesota Clean Energy
Economy Profile, a 54-page report from the state
departments of commerce and employment and
economic development.
Last year, Dayton signed into law a requirement
that Minnesota investor-owned utilities get at least
1.5 percent of their power from solar by 2020. He
said there was no better place than Minnesota’s international airport to demonstrate the state’s commitment to phasing-out fossil fuels.
Hamiel described the project as a “statement,”
adding that he expected it to not only pay for itself
but save the MAC “at least $10 million” by 2030.
Got a buzz tip? Email Ben Johnson at bjohnson@journalmpls.com.
Simpls Grab and Go — a new skyway eatery
focused on whole foods with high quality ingredients — has opened in the 6 Quebec building at
6th & Marquette. The skyway spot offers breakfast, lunch items
and all kinds of snacks from 7 a.m.–3 p.m.,
Monday–Friday.
For breakfast, Simpls has Peace Coffee,
Common Roots bagels, an oatmeal bar, yogurt
and muffins, among other things. Lunch options
include several kinds of sandwiches, wraps, soups
and salads. Snack items include fruit, veggies,
snack bars, chips, jerky and baked goods. Simpls also offers catering. For more information, visit simpls.com.
— Sarah McKenzie
Advertising:
sales@journalmpls.com
35,000 copies of The Journal are
distributed free of charge
to homes and businesses
in Downtown and
Northeast Minneapolis.
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Fax: 612-436-4396
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journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 7
News
Parks Update
Park Board
hosting
meeting on
proposed
riverfront
storage facility
“Field of
Dreams,” by
Shari Seifert
earned the
first place
honor in the
Picture a Park
photo contest.
Submitted
photo
The Park Board is hosting a community
meeting about its plan to renovate an industrial riverfront property into a place to fi x and
store heavy machinery after it faced heavy
criticism from surrounding neighborhoods.
Park Board staff will listen to concerns from
residents who live near the property at 1720
Marshall St. NE and try to brainstorm solutions on Oct. 14, 6:30-8:00 p.m. at Eastside
Neighborhood Services, 1700 2nd St. NE.
The plan came up for board approval at
the Aug. 20 Park Board meeting, but after
more than 30 people testified against it
commissioners voted to table the proposal
until Nov. 5.
Critics of the $4 million plan are opposed
to new industrial uses along the riverfront
and say the project is too expensive and
will bring unwanted noise and trucks to the
neighborhood.
A narrow park along the Mississippi River
is included in the proposal, but residents say
it’s too small and secluded.
Winners of Picture a Park photo
contest announced
The winners of the 5th annual Picture a
Park photo contest were announced on
Oct. 1, but there’s still time to vote on the
People’s Choice award online.
The contest netted 260 entries depicting
life in Minneapolis parks across all seasons,
down from 316 entries last year.
Go to silverimages.com/mpb to browse
all of the submitted photos and cast a vote
for the People’s Choice award. Voting will
close Oct. 17.
Overall 14 winners were selected in
four different categories: Fun in the Parks,
Beauty in the Parks, Sports in the Parks and
Photos by Youth. To view a gallery of the
winners go to bit.ly/mprbphoto.
Shari Seifert took the Best of Show
Gold Medal with her photo titled “Field
of Dreams,” and Paige Simmons won the
Photos by Youth category and took the
Silver in Best in Show with her photo
“Shadow of Summer.”
Winners received a variety of prizes,
including photo enlargements and gift
cards to National Camera Exchange, calendars featuring the winning images, Park
Board Annual Parking Permits and passes
to the Wirth Winter Recreation Area or the
Jim Lupient Water Park.
— B.J.
— Ben Johnson
Public input sought for new East Bank Trail
With the bike and pedestrian trails along West
River Road mostly torn up, ready for a muchneeded redo next spring, planners from the Park
Board have turned their sights to the Mississippi
River’s east bank.
Park Board staff is soliciting feedback on a new
riverfront bike and pedestrian trail that will run
along the riverfront from Plymouth Avenue up
to the railroad bridge near Marshall Street and
17th Avenue NE.
Community meetings were already held Sept.
16 and Oct. 7, and a final meeting is slated for
Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m. at Park Board headquarters,
2117 West River Road.
After that there will be a public hearing in
November and commissioners are scheduled
to sign off on the concept in early December.
Construction will start next fall or spring of 2016.
The project is being funded through a combination of state and federal grants along with
regional park funds from lottery proceeds.
— B.J.
1750 Lexington Ave (651) 488-3470
(1 Mile S of 36 1 Block N of Larpenteur)
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8 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
As part of
the proposed
Clean Energy
Partnership,
Minneapolis
residents and
businesses
could see more
renewable
energy options,
such as solar
gardens. File
photo
FROM CLEAN ENERGY / PAGE 1
also review their work.
The goal is give utility customers more options
for how their energy is generated, increase
opportunities for renewable-energy programs
and come up with innovative solutions for the
city to decrease its dependence on fossil fuels to
generate energy.
A couple of priorities highlighted for
2015–2016 include establishing a community
solar garden and creating new energy efficiency
programs for multi-family housing.
The idea for the partnership came out of talks
between the city and the utilities as the current
franchise agreements with Xcel and CenterPoint
are set to expire at the end of this year. As part
of the franchise agreements, the utilities pay
the city a fee for use of the public right of way
along streets and alleys for distribution lines that
connect homes and businesses to utility services. The new franchise agreements would be
effective for a maximum of 10 years and give the
city the option to issue a 12-month termination
notice after five years if city leaders aren’t satisfied
with progress made toward the city’s environmental goals.
Earlier this year the nonprofit Center for
Energy and Environment recommended the city
renew its agreements with Xcel and CenterPoint
and came up with a series of recommendations
for ways to work toward achieving the city’s
energy goals. The Energy Pathways Study recommended the utilities report annually on energy
usage and reliability of service, among other
things. City Council Vice President Elizabeth
Glidden said she was thrilled how the partnership has come together and credited the Energy
Pathways Study for being an important roadmap
for negotiations on the new partnership.
“All eyes are on us now,” she said of the unique
arrangement between Minneapolis and the utilities. “I am really happy this is moving forward.
It’s a major accomplishment.”
City Council Member Lisa Bender (Ward
10) said she’s “deeply committed to the accountability piece on this.”
She praised the clean energy advocates who
pushed the issue front and center and applauded
the utilities for being willing to come to the table.
Council Member Cam Gordon, chair of the
Health Environment & Community Engagement Committee, called the agreement a “great
turning point” that could serve as a model for
other communities.
“The issue of our time is climate change,” he
said. “We have to change direction … and we
have to get there quickly.”
The city’s Climate Action Plan, adopted by the
City Council in 2013, outlines several environmental goals, including reducing citywide greenhouse gas emissions 15 percent by 2015 and 30
percent by 2025. The city also has an Energy
Vision that says the city will provide “reliable,
affordable, local and clean energy services” for
homes, businesses and institutions by 2040. Laura McCarten, a regional vice president for
Xcel Energy, commended city leaders for how
negotiations proceeded and said the utilities
gained important insights about the city.
She said over half of Xcel’s energy sources are
carbon free and the utility is the nation’s leader in
wind power. The company is on track to reduce
its greenhouse gas emissions 30 percent by 2020,
she added.
Representatives of Community Power, a
grassroots group that evolved from the Minneapolis Energy Options campaign active during
the 2014 city election, also spoke in favor of the
partnership at the hearing. They said they will be
monitoring the progress of the partnership and
making sure utilities are held accountable.
Betty Tisel, a Kingfield resident who has solar
installed on her home, urged the Council to
make sure the advisory committee for the new
partnership also gives renters, senior citizens and
youth a seat at the table.
“Renewable energy shouldn’t be a luxury of
the few,” she said.
journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 9
FROM AFFORDABLE HOUSING / PAGE 1
Hodges has proposed roughly $12 million
for affordable housing in the 2015 budget,
which includes funding for the Affordable
Housing Trust Fund and other programs, said
Ben Hecker, the mayor’s deputy chief of staff.
The funding level could fluctuate,
however, depending on the city’s allocation
from the federal Community Development
Block Grant (CDBG) program.
The mayor’s proposed budget, which
calls for a 2.4 percent tax levy hike, is undergoing review by the City Council. Council
members will vote on adopting the budget
in mid-December.
McAllister said City Council Member
Jacob Frey (Ward 3) has been eager to push
for additional affordable housing dollars in
the 2015 budget.
“An economic boom like the present
should help the whole city — not just
those with granite counter tops and organic
fruit in the fridge,” Frey said in a statement
released by campaign organizers. “Our
neighborhoods should include a variety
of housing options and socio-economic
classes. These goals are not possible if every
apartment is going for $1,500 a month. If we
are serious about narrowing the opportunity
gap we need to put our money where our
mouth is, and that means making affordable
housing a priority in our budget.”
The Minneapolis Trends report for the
second quarter of 2014 listed the city’s
average monthly rent at $1,118 and the
vacancy rate at 3.5 percent.
A Minnesota Housing Partnership report
released in August indicated that 50 percent
of renters in Hennepin County spend more
than 30 percent of their income on rent and
about a quarter spend more than half of
their paycheck on housing.
Statewide, rents have increased 6 percent
News
Emanuel Apartments is a new supportive housing development downtown. The development of affordable housing hasn’t kept pace
with demand. Submitted photo
while renter incomes have dropped 17 percent.
Frey said he’d like to see more money put
into the Affordable Housing Trust Fund
that doesn’t come with restrictions. Much of
the funding for projects comes with various
requirements that can make it difficult for
developers to proceed with projects.
He also wants to see more affordable
housing in higher income areas outside
areas of concentrated poverty in North
Minneapolis where many subsidized units
are concentrated as a means to desegregate
the city.
He’s been working with Council Member
Lisa Bender (Ward 10) to explore inclusionary housing policies used in other parts
of the country to encourage the development of affordable housing options.
Inclusionary housing policies offer incen-
tives to developers who include affordable
housing units in market-rate projects. For
instance, the city could grant a developer’s
request to build taller than zoning allows in
exchange for requiring some units be rented
at affordable rates.
Since New York City started using inclusionary zoning, more than 4,400 affordable
housing units have been created, according to
a report by the Center for Housing Policy. In
Boston, similar policies have produced 1,070
affordable units as of September 2012.
Voters in Austin, Texas have gone even
further to encourage the development of
affordable housing by recently approving $65
million in bonding for new projects in the city.
The Minnesota Legislature approved
$100 million in state bonding for affordable
housing during the 2014 session, but housing
experts say even more will be needed to meet
the demand for low-cost housing.
Organizers of the $20 million for affordable homes campaign in Minneapolis
referenced a family of six living in a threebedroom, 1,000-square foot apartment
struggling to make ends meet.
Kenkeisha Warren and Tommy Stafford
earn minimum wage jobs and spend more
than 30 percent of their income on their
$950 monthly rent.
“It is hard to find a decent place to live
when rents are so high,” the couple said in a
statement. “We want to live in Minneapolis,
but we have seen it get harder to find a place
that we can afford.”
Schools Notebook
District proposes
4.5-percent levy hike
With an eye on increasing enrollment, Minneapolis Public Schools is planning a tax levy increase
of up to 4.5 percent that will fund renovations at
six buildings.
The School Board on Sept. 23 voted 6–3 to
approve the preliminary levy amount. If it passes
a final vote in December, the levy would raise an
additional $179.6 million for the district in the
2015–2016 school year.
About $155 million of those funds are targeted
to capital improvements at Southwest High
School, Seward Montessori School, Sanford
Middle School, the Wilder Complex that houses
the district’s online education program and other
offices, Franklin Middle School and Webster
Elementary School. The last two buildings on that
list are closed schools slated to reopen next fall.
Those plans could change, though, as the
district gets a clearer picture of its enrollment in
October.
The new programs at Franklin and Webster
were part of the five-year enrollment plan the
School Board approved last December. At the
time, the 34,000-student district was projecting
enrollment growth of about 10 percent over the
next five years, but Chief Operations Officer
Robert Doty said new enrollments this fall don’t
appear to be living up to that promise.
“We have not lost enrollment, but the growth
that was projected as of this point doesn’t look like
it’s materializing the way we anticipated,” Doty
told the School Board.
School districts across the state report their
official fall enrollment totals Oct. 1.
If the five-year enrollment plan was fully realized, it could add up to 4,800 new classroom
seats for Minneapolis students. It appears the
district may not need all of those seats, or at
least not as soon as was thought just last year.
Still, Doty urged the School Board to pass the
preliminary levy at the full amount to give
administrators the “flexibility” to deal with
whatever enrollment challenges arise.
“The 4.5-percent (levy hike) assumes that we
can do all six of those projects, but as we start to
look at where enrollment is actually coming in at,
it may be important for us to cancel or delay one
or more of those projects in this upcoming year
depending on enrollment,” Doty said.
The district held the levy flat last year. This year’s
proposed hike would increase taxes on a home
valued at $300,000 by $60.10 per year.
Casting one of three votes against the preliminary levy was Board Member Alberto Monserrate,
who noted the district’s levy increase was likely
to be higher than those pitched by Minneapolis
and Hennepin County. Monserrate suggested
the district levy for a lower amount and borrow, if
necessary, to cover school renovation costs.
“I don’t believe this is a good time to be
increasing taxes above the rate of everybody else,”
he said.
A vote on the final levy amount is scheduled for
the School Board’s Dec. 9 meeting. The district
plans community meetings on the levy, but had
not released a schedule as of late September.
— Dylan Thomas
Education Department
releases school ratings
Ten Minneapolis schools are among the
state’s lowest performers in terms of closing
the achievement gap, according to a Minnesota Department of Education report
released Oct. 1.
Those schools earned the “Priority” label
under the department’s Multiple Measurement Ratings, the local replacement for
the federal No Child Left Behind rating
system, meaning they rank in the bottom 5
percent of all the state’s high-poverty Title 1
schools in increasing student achievement.
The district’s “Priority” schools are concentrated in North Minneapolis (Bethune,
Jenny Lind, Lucy Laney, Elizabeth Hall,
Hmong International Academy and North
High School), and include three schools in
other parts of the city (Sheridan, Anishinabe Academy and Green Central).
In a statement released by the district,
Superintendent Bernadeia Johnson said the
results were not a surprise, adding that the
district continues to make changes to speed
improvement at those schools.
Another 17 district schools, plus some of
the contract alternative schools that serve
Minneapolis students, are listed in the “Focus”
category by the department of education.
They rank in the bottom 10 percent of Title 1
schools statewide and, like “Priority” schools,
are identified as needing more intensive
support from the state and district.
The district also had three of the highestperforming Title 1 schools in the state.
Northrop, Anthony and Patrick Henry High
School were all named “Reward” schools,
meaning they ranked in the top 15 percent of
schools serving high-poverty populations.
Kenny, Waite Park and Ramsey were
“Celebration Eligible” schools, ranking in the
top 25 percent statewide.
Multiple Measurement Ratings are based
on student performance on state standardized tests. The ratings attempt to measure not
just student proficiency on the tests but also
student growth and schools’ progress toward
closing the achievement gap. At the high
school level, graduation rate also counts
toward the rating.
— D.T.
FOLLOW
THE JOURNAL
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The Journal @TheJournalMPLS
10 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
News
SOUTHWEST LRT
Park Board votes to study light rail tunnel
Study could lay the groundwork for a lawsuit or make one unnecessary
BY DYLAN THOMAS dthomas@journalmpls.com
A divided Minneapolis Park and Recreation
Board voted Oct. 1 to spend up to $500,000
studying a tunnel beneath the Kenilworth
Channel to carry light rail trains.
The Metropolitan Council planners leading
the nearly $1.7 billion Southwest Light Rail
Transit project had previously discarded that
option in favor of a bridge over the channel. The
resolution, passed on a 5–2 vote, states the bridge
“will fundamentally and permanently affect and
change park, recreation areas, and historic property” near the channel, which connects Cedar
Lake and Lake of the Isles.
The Park Board’s action could lay the groundwork for a future lawsuit by making the case that
a tunnel is a “feasible and prudent alternative” to
a bridge. That’s the standard for protecting parkland and historic sites set down in section 4(f) of
the Federal Transportation Act.
The resolution was a last-minute addition to
the board’s agenda. Parks Superintendent Jayne
Miller said it was first discussed in a meeting two
days earlier with Commissioner Meg Forney
(at-large) and Park Board President Liz Wielinski
(District 1). Also present were staff members
and two attorneys: Brian Rice, regular legal
counsel for the agency, and Byron Starns, who
was recently retained by the Park Board in case of
Southwest light rail litigation.
News
Commissioners Brad Bourn (District 6) and
Steffanie Musich (District 5) both voted against,
arguing that the Park Board was circumventing
the public process by not first going through
committee.
Bourn said he was ill at home and watching
the meeting on TV before discussion of the
resolution began. He rushed to the boardroom to
join the debate, urging his colleagues to delay the
vote until their Oct. 22 meeting.
“For the minimum of transparency and good
government on a $500,000 expenditure, I don’t
see how we can not do that,” he said.
Bourn also noted two commissioners, Annie
Young (at-large) and Jon Olson (District 2),
were absent.
But five other commissioners, who argued
there was no time to delay, won out.
“This is a very urgent matter that requires
immediate attention,” said Commissioner Scott
Vreeland (District 3).
Jennifer Ringold, manager of public engagement and city planning, said quick action would
get the Park Board and its constituents the
answers they want without causing serious delays
to the project, which recently entered the final
engineering stage. The results of the tunnel study
could be entered into an ongoing environmental
review of the project, making a lawsuit unneces-
sary, Ringold said.
Miller said the cost of the tunnel study will be
paid out of Park Board reserve funds.
“That’s a ball field,” Wielinski said of the
$500,000, adding that she was reluctant to
spend the money but saw no other option. She
expressed indignation that the Met Council, an
unelected body, had not satisfactorily vetted the
tunnel option.
“Unlike the Met Council, I have an election
certificate,” Wielinski said. “People went to the
polls and voted me in here.”
The Met Council released this statement
the morning after the meeting: “The Southwest Project Office invested 800 engineering
hours looking at tunnels under the channel
and presented that information to the Corridor
Management Committee in March 2014. The
committee did not direct the project office to
further evaluate or advance these designs.”
A majority of the committee’s members are
elected officials from Hennepin County and
cities on or near the 16-mile light rail route. In
April, they voted to approve a plan that had light
rail trains crossing the Kenilworth Channel on
a bridge but running through shallow, cut-andcover tunnels on either side of the waterway.
Before that vote, the committee considered
and rejected at least three different tunnel plans,
including a subway-style tunnel deep below the
Kenilworth Channel.
The so-called deep-bore tunnel had strong
support among those living close to the channel,
but it came with a big price tag. When the
committee set that option aside in 2013, its
estimated cost was $170 million–$180 million
greater than the two shallow tunnels connected
by a bridge.
Then, with just one week remaining before
the committee’s April 2 vote, Met Council engineers presented the committee two new tunnel
designs. Both were shallow tunnels that dove
deeper to run beneath the Kenilworth Channel,
but they varied in length.
They were estimated to cost $40 million–$80
million more than shallow tunnels connected
by a bridge and would have delayed the light rail
line’s opening by one year. The committee opted
to go over the Kenilworth Channel rather than
beneath it.
This summer, closed-door negotiations
between Minneapolis and the Met Council
eliminated the tunnel north of the waterway,
cutting $60 million from the total cost of the
project and preserving the 21st Street Station in
the Kenwood neighborhood. That station was
eliminated under a two-tunnel plan.
Green Digest
More organics drop-off sites opening
The city opened a third organics recycling drop-off site at Van Cleve Park Sept.
21 and plans to open three more by the
end of October.
The drop-off site at Audubon Park
in Northeast was scheduled to begin
accepting household organics Oct. 7.
Drop-off sites at Armatage and Whittier
parks in Southwest Minneapolis will open
later in October, said Minneapolis Recycling Coordinator Kellie Kish.
Just eight of Minneapolis’ more than
80 neighborhoods have curbside organic
waste recycling through a city pilot
program. It’s expected that the curbside
program will go citywide in 2015, but
the drop-off sites give eager household
recyclers an option for their organic waste
until then.
The first organics drop-off site opened
April 26 in Pearl Park. A second opened
in early August at the city’s South
Transfer Station near where Lake Street
runs beneath Hiawatha Avenue.
A survey of Pearl Park drop-off site users
showed they were driving or bicycling to
that location from 29 different Minneapolis neighborhoods, an indication that
there was strong demand for the service in
other parts of the city, Kish said.
She said the city doesn’t have solid
numbers on just how many people are
using the drop-off sites, but noted an
email list for the Pearl Park location had
575 individual addresses. When it first
opened, it was getting between 40 and 60
visits during any given three-hour period,
she added.
Most of those Pearl Park drop-off site
users were coming from single-family
households, according to a survey of visitors conducted earlier this year. But there
were a significant number of apartment
dwellers, as well, Kish said, and that has
implications for the city’s plans to expand
curbside organics pickup beyond the pilot
program.
Citywide curbside collection of organic
waste would eliminate the need for
drop-off sites, except that the city and
its contractor for residential recycling
services don’t serve large multi-family
residential buildings. In some areas with
lots of apartment buildings, there may
still be demand for a drop-off program
even after the expansion of curbside
pickup, Kish said.
The city is under pressure from
Hennepin County to get that curbside
program up and running soon.
In February, the county dropped
a longstanding request to burn more
trash at its downtown incinerator, the
Hennepin Energy Recovery Center. In
exchange, it demanded Minneapolis add
organics collection to its solid waste and
recycling services by the start of 2015.
If the city doesn’t follow through,
Hennepin County could withhold the
$864,000 per year in state funds for recy-
cling it passes on to Minneapolis.
A city study released in March indicated the program would cost at least
$3.5 million per year, adding $17.60 to
residents’ monthly solid waste and recycling fees. At the time, Solid Waste and
Recycling Director David Herberholz said
curbside organic recycling would likely
debut as an opt-in program, possibly in
the spring or summer.
Participation in the pilot program ranges
from about 30 to 50 percent of households
in the neighborhoods where it’s offered,
according to the city. Kish said participating households recycle roughly 7 to 13
pounds of organics per week.
Hours vary at the city’s drop-off locations, which will remain open all winter
long. For more information, including a
list of acceptable materials, go to minneapolismn.gov/solid-waste/organics.
— Dylan Thomas
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Email Sarah McKenzie at
smckenzie@journalmpls.com.
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update at journalmpls.com.
Game imagines
ecological
disaster for
Minneapolis
There’s nothing like a science fiction-themed,
live action role playing game — on bicycles
— to get people thinking critically about the
environment, right?
That’s the idea behind “Ruination: City of Dust,”
a game that challenges teams of up to six players
to imagine themselves as archaeologists exploring
Minneapolis in the year 2314, when the city is
nothing more than parched ruins. The teams have
to figure out what went wrong.
To put on “Ruination,” the Minnehaha Creek
Watershed District and the Minneapolis Park and
Recreation Board teamed with Northern Lights.
mn, the organization behind the Northern Spark
all-night summer art event. The game itself is
the work of Ken Eklund, a San Jose, Calif., based
game designer.
Northern Lights.mn Project Coordinator Ady
Olson said the goal is to make participants “think
critically about the city, about the environment
and about their surroundings.”
Up to 64 teams can join the game Oct. 18–19.
They’ll travel by bicycle along Minnehaha Creek to
gather clues, riding around 5 miles during the two
to three hours it will take to complete “Ruination,”
she said.
For more information, or to register, go to
ruination.mn.
— D.T.
journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 11
FROM ORCHESTRA / PAGE 1
“The orchestra is super-charged at this
point,” Smith said, “Working with the
musicians and staff has really changed the
dynamic.”
Smith, who retired in 2011 after 25 years
as president of the Minnesota Opera, has
experience turning around organizations
like the orchestra. During his tenure, the
Minnesota Opera grew its budget from $1.5
to $9 million, doubled its attendance and
made the Arts Partnership, a collaboration
with other top arts organizations in the
Twin Cities.
However, Smith said the orchestra has a
different culture, budget and size than the
Minnesota Opera. He and new staff are
playing catch-up to get to know the worldclass orchestra, but they’re making progress.
“Over all the trauma of the past few years,
there’s been a breakdown of communication,” Smith said.
Smith’s first priority has been establishing trust and communication between
musicians, administration and community
groups.
This collaborative spirit has led to musicians becoming involved with non-musical
activities like outreach and fundraising
more than they ever had before, he said.
Principal cellist Tony Ross, who chairs
the orchestra’s artistic advisory committee
and was a negotiation committee member,
echoes this sentiment. He also said musicians have taken a bigger role since the
lockout ended.
“When we returned in February, there
was a certain amount of disarray in management,” Ross said, “so my committee stepped
into that vacuum.”
One change that Ross said both musicians and fans enjoy is that this new season
focuses more on core classical repertoire.
He said the musicians have helped shape
this season, creating events and themes.
The new season and artistic direction is
especially important for Ross, who considered leaving the orchestra in April for a
position with the Lyric Opera of Chicago.
He said Vänskä, who returned earlier
this year after leaving in October 2013, has
been key to retaining the orchestra’s unique
sound, which garnered them a Grammy for
Best Orchestral Performance in January.
This month, the orchestra begins a threeweek celebration of German composer
Richard Strauss’ 150th birthday.
Fans can also look forward to the
orchestra playing classical works from
Shostakovich, Tchaikovsky, Stravinsky,
among others, as well as special themed and
holiday performances.
In its final season performance in June,
the orchestra will play work from Jean Sibellius, which is a specialty of Vänskä, and, in
cyclical fashion, return to Mahler.
It’s clear from the program that the musicians are looking to make a statement to
fans and the orchestra community.
In its season opener last month, the
orchestra returned with Gustav Mahler’s
“Resurrection” Symphony, a clear, symbolic
choice for an organization that found itself
in complete chaos a year ago.
The orchestra community has had its own
revival as well. With fans packed tightly in
the Orchestra Hall lobby, free champagne in
hand, before season’s first show, an orchestra
staff member read a statement from Gov.
Mark Dayton naming Sept. 26 Minnesota
Orchestra Day.
For Ross, it’s very exciting to be back at
work.
“It’s a new beginning for us. It’s kind of a
restart.”
NEIGHBORHOOD SKETCHBOOK
Illustration by
12 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
Art Beat
Scene
A soccer ball on the
beach near Casa
Poli — one of the
featured images in
Alexa Horochowski’s
new exhibit at
the Soap Factory.
Submitted photo
BY DYLAN THOMAS dthomas@journalmpls.com
I
t’s odd finding references to cochayuyo on
Chilean cooking websites, with advice for
home cooks to re-hydrate dried bundles of
the bull kelp species before adding chunks to
salads or the sauté pan.
Or at least it is after seeing Alexa Horochowski’s
new exhibition at the Soap Factory, where she
molds its long, leathery, alien-looking tendrils into
sculptures that resemble the mating balls of snakes.
Horochowski also weaves bronze-toned cochayuyo between the bars of a steel cage — a starkly
beautiful pairing of natural and manmade materials, and a higher use of the seaweed, perhaps,
than mashing it with garlic like a briny potato.
Horochowski encountered Durvillaea antarctica during a residency at Casa Poli, a cultural
center on the Chile’s Coliumo Peninsula where
she spent part of the Southern Hemisphere
summer of 2012–2013. On her website, Horochowski shares photos of cochayuyo hanging to
dry from the second-story window of Casa Poli,
a Brutalist concrete box perched above the ocean
on a granite cliff.
On the beach down below, she shot video of
forests of floating cochayuyo churning in the
surf. At the Soap Factory, the footage is projected
on three screens in a darkened room filled with
an ominous soundtrack — metallic shrieking
over rumbling bass that seems to steadily
increase in volume before starting over. The
images are mirrored vertically, and the symmetry
emphasizes the otherworldly strangeness of the
kelp; it seems to thrash like in the waves like the
tentacles of a sea monster.
Other objects and specimens Horochowski
observed or collected while in Chile appear in
the show’s mix of minimalist sculptures, video
works and black-and-white digital prints. The
Soap Factory’s raw, industrial gallery space is
a surprisingly suitable stand-in for the rugged
Chilean coastline. You half expect to see a guanostreaked rock even before you catch a glimpse
of the chair Horochowski has slathered in thick
white paint and gull feathers.
The title of the show, “Club Disminución,” is
translated as “Club of Diminishing Returns.” The
implication is that something has peaked and is
headed downhill, and that something may be us.
Another video underscores the point. The
view this time is from inside a sea cave, and we
can see light and waves rushing through the
opening. Again the image is mirrored, this time
horizontally, so that the side-by-side cave mouths
resemble the two empty eye sockets of a skull.
Alexa Horochowski:
Club Disminución
WHEN: Through Nov. 9
WHERE: The Soap Factory,
514 2nd St. SE
INFO: 623-9176, soapfactory.org
Horochowski makes bronze casts of sea
sponges, and the sculptures, pocked with holes,
look either like nature translated into metal or
metal decomposing under natural forces. What
looks like a giant clamshell plucked right from
the ocean is actually another bronze, a trompe
l’oeil sculpture.
Through repeated mixing of natural and artificial materials, or the substitution of one for the
other, Horochowski evokes nature’s power to
erase us, to erode what we’ve built or cover it in
weeds until it slowly crumbles.
As for humans, we’re only represented indirectly. Our trash appears neatly arranged on a
table of flotsam. In a photograph taken on the
roof of Casa Poli, we see no people, just three
empty chairs and the beginning of a sunset over
the ocean.
A TALE
OF FIVE
TRIBES
Public Functionary has dedicated its 2014
exhibition schedule to narrative in art,
and with the latest installment, an unusual
collaboration between two artists, the
focus shifts to mythmaking.
A year or so ago, the printmaker Edie
Overturf and illustrator and cartoonist
Derek Van Gieson decided to tell the
stories of five imaginary “tribes,” including
bearded hermaphrodites, a race of cat
people and species of two-headed human.
They are creatures you might find stalking
the unexplored regions on a medieval map.
They came up with a few plot points,
but then Overturf and Van Gieson went
their separate ways, developing the ideas
individually, Overturf in color woodblock
prints and Van Gieson in ink-slicked drawings toned sepia with coffee stains.
Like most of our myths and legends,
these stories come in competing, maybe
even irreconcilable versions. If there is
a narrative thread running through the
dozens of prints and drawings, it’s been cut
to bits and is frayed at both ends.
But there’s plenty to enjoy in the individual images, especially the cheeky way
Overturf’s gender-mixed creatures enact
scenes from religious art, as when a trio
of bearded women emerge from the belly
of a fish, Jonah-like, while the cat people
look on.
Van Gieson exercises his comics-making
chops, telling his version of the cat people
myth — one that appears to contain love,
violence and village ritual — in a dozen
loosely linked, gestural drawings.
Overturf + Van Gieson: In Search Of …
WHEN: Through Oct. 17
WHERE: Public Functionary,
1400 12th Ave. NE
INFO: 238-9523,
publicfunctionary.org
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10/2/14 11:04 AM
14 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
Get Out Guide
Scene
BY ERIC BEST
THE THEATER OF
PUBLIC POLICY
The Theater of Public Policy, or
T2P2, is one part politics and public
policy and one part improve comedy.
While the pair appear impossibly
separate, T2P2 has combined the
two with expert guests and talented
improvisers, and is receiving
national attention along the way. For
its Oct. 13 performance, T2P2 will
feature four guests (Iris Altamirano,
Rebecca Gagnon, Ira Jourdain, Don
Samuels) from the Minneapolis
School Board race and bring it to life
with unscripted improv comedy. In a
similar fashion, on Oct. 20, T2P2 has
invited three major party candidates
vying Minnesota’s secretary of state
position for a lively, comedic political
discussion. T2P2 will continue its
civically minded events after Election
Day until the end of November.
Photo by Jen van Kaam
NORTHEAST FARMERS
MARKET HARVEST GALA
The Northeast Farmers Market is hosting its third annual Harvest Gala, an evening
of farmers, chefs and live entertainment. The Gala pairs up vendors and cooks to
create dishes with ingredients sourced from the market itself. Local eats will come
from Chowgirls Killer Catering, Modern Café, Red Stag Supperclub, etc., with beer
from the Northeast Brewers Alliance. The evening also includes belly dancers by
Giza Sangria and bluegrass music from Cedar and Stone, plus a silent auction
featuring donations from Brasa, Alma and many others.
When: Oct. 13 and Oct. 20
Where: Bryant-Lake Bowl, 810 W. Lake St.
Cost: $7 in advance, $10 at door
Info: T2P2.net
10,000 LAUGHS FESTIVAL
The 10,000 Laughs Festival features the state’s best stand-up comedians in a weeklong celebration featuring live shows, sketch comedy, music and storytelling. This
year will feature nine venues across the Twin Cities and 100 comedians have been
selected to perform throughout the week. The festival will also include a pun show,
a Punchline Punchout competition and a short film contest.
When: Oct. 20 through Oct. 25
Where: Various venues
Cost: $50 for all-access pass, $5 to $15 per show
Info: 10000laughs.com
When: Thursday, Oct. 16 from 6 to 10 p.m.
Where: Solar Arts Building, 711 NE. 15th Ave.
Cost: $15 in advance, $20 at door
Info: northeastmarket.org
TWIN CITIES FILM FESTIVAL
The Twin Cities’ premier film event kicks off Oct. 16 and includes top films
and work from local talent. This year’s festival features big titles with “Wild”
starring Reese Witherspoon and “Men, Women & Children” starring Jennifer
Garner and Adam Sandler from director Jason Reitman (“Up in the Air,”
“Juno”). Filmgoers should also consider World War II thriller and potential
Oscar contender “The Imitation Game,” which won the Toronto Film Festival’s
People’s Choice Award and features Benedict Cumberbatch. The festival also
features plenty of local work, including this year’s Centerpiece film, “Hunger in
America,” produced by Minneapolis’ Tim VandeSteeg.
When: Oct. 16 through Oct. 25
Where: Kerasotes ShowPlace ICON, 1625 West End Blvd.
Cost: $10 per film, passes are available
Info: twincitiesfilmfest.org
TWEED RIDE
The creative locals of Cult Collective are hosting a bike ride of tweed-clad
riders. If it sounds unusual, then you’ve gotten the point. In its sixth year,
the Tweed Ride is like few other bike events or pub crawls, but the concept
is simple: Cyclists dress in their sharpest tweed regalia and bike around
Minneapolis’ pubs. Bikers depart from Lake Harriet Bandshell and will
ride to Fulton Brewery, the Soap Factory’s Exile Lounge and end at the
Dakota Jazz Club for dancing. Two riders with the best tweed or tweedinspired wardrobes will receive whiskey, not to mention bragging rights,
and others can win raffle prizes. Inspired riders ages 21 and over can join
at anytime throughout the ride.
When: Saturday, Oct. 11 at 5:30 p.m.
Where: Lake Harriet Bandshell,
4135 W. Lake Harriet Pkwy.
Cost: Free
Info: tweedride.wordpress.com
Photo by Jennifer Simonson
TWIN CITIES BOOK FESTIVAL
The Twin Cities literary community is hosting its largest event of the year, the
Twin Cities Book Festival. For local readers, it’s the ultimate chance to meet and
connect with authors, publishers, magazine staff — and everything else local
and literary — while they’re all at the same place. Appearances include many
locals like Julie Schumacher (“Dear Committee Members”), Stephan Eirik Clark
(“Sweetness #9”) and Dessa, as well as national and international writers, such
as Steven Pinker (“How the Mind Works”) and Marie Lu (“Legends” series). This
family-friendly event is also great for young readers with dozens of events with
children’s and young adult books.
When: Saturday, Oct. 11 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Where: Minnesota State Fairgrounds, 1265 N. Snelling Ave.
Cost: Free
Info: raintaxi.com
journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 15
Flavor
Scene
Workshop at Union
731 Hennepin Ave.
455-6690
workshopatunion.com
Imagination
runs wild at
Workshop
Submitted photo
BY CARLA WALDEMAR
RESTAURANT REVIEW/ Heads up,
foodies! Remember Stewart Woodman? Sure
you do, and mourn the demise of Heidi’s, where
the kitchen’s star-chitect crafted food combos
and preps that made us go “Huh?” before going
“Yeah!”
Well, he’s back, as head culinary honcho
for the scenester Kaskaid group, redesigning
menus for holdings that include Union, Crave
and Boneyard — and, incidentally, inviting the
dining public into his brain at Workshop.
It’s the newly launched showpiece of culinary
adventure, open Thursday, Friday and Saturday
evenings in the former, street-level fishhouse
space underpinning Union. In fact, Workshop’s
C ROSSWO R D PUZ Z L E
SPO N SO RED BY EDIN A REA LTY DOWN TOWN MI N N E APOLI S OF F I CE
Lynn Morgan
612.347.8059
ACROSS
1 Club joke teller
6 Misfortunes
10 Motel worker
14 Traditional Pennsylvania
barn raisers
15 Tide type
16 Ploy
17 Letter-routing number
19 Overly submissive
20 Poker hand prize
21 Thai language
22 Baker that “nobody doesn’t
like”
24 __ cum laude
26 Beer barrel
27 Can in an Andy Warhol
painting
32 __ New Guinea
33 Hairy Addams cousin
34 Norwegian capital
36 Fancy flower vase
37 Hat for a Western hero
41 Former Mideast alliance:
Abbr.
42 Emily Dickinson, e.g.
44 Apt name for a painter
45 How the elated walk
47 World Series setting
51 “2001” computer
52 Mars neighbor
53 Traveled around 52-Across,
say
57 Mates for mas
58 Chicken __ king
61 Fight-or-flight emotion
62 California Gold Rush figure
65 Fly like a butterfly
66 Reverse
67 Early morning hr.
68 Heavy drinkers
69 Jump
70 Yellowish-brown
DOWN
1 Dogpatch creator Al
2 Melville novel
3 Light fog
4 Suffix with Marx
5 Fried Taco Bell offerings
6 It may be gross or net
7 MGM mascot
8 Boys
9 Has a talk with
10 Nearsighted toon
11 “The Mammoth Hunters”
author Jean
12 “Got it”
13 Fake on the ice
18 Ram’s offspring
23 Hi-__ monitor
24 Church-owned Texas sch.
25 Not very much
27 Chocolate substitute
Listed as “tater tots with blue cheese” on the
starter list ($6–$10), that item’s unannounced
embellishments include pulled skirt steak livened
with tomatillos and more (lots more.) The starter
list also salutes winners like fried egg with ham
gravy and hot sauce, which involves crumbs and
foam and tasso, like something Faberge might
sell. And, with its still-kinda-runny yolk balanced
by the tasso’s slight saltines, it’s terrific. So is the
foie gras with succotash. Well, that combo is a
first for me, and it works — the diced veggies
cavorting in a cherry gastrique that balances the
liver’s divine fattiness.
Preceding those starters (and half a dozen
more I covet) comes a list of Small Bites
menu includes a short list of “Rooftop Classics”
culled from Union’s best-loved dishes.
But the real action — and there’s more of it
here than anywhere else in town that comes to
mind, including video arcades and drag strips
— occurs at Workshop. Let’s just add that, while
it’s like the NASA of food art, it’s no deer-in-thekitchen’s-headlights kind of place (c’mon—with
tater tots on the menu?)
You’ll easily comprehend the listings, but
here’s where the fun comes in. It’s one of those
under-promise, over-deliver kind of places. Sure,
a “jumbo French fry” — but it’s been baked,
sliced, frozen, fried, re-frozen, and re-fried
(TMI?) to produce this savory little success.
28 Sleep disorder
29 Ranks for Columbo and
Kojak: Abbr.
30 Customary
31 Tartan pattern
32 Coyote’s offspring
35 Hockey legend Bobby
38 Enough food for a feast
39 Mesozoic or Paleozoic
40 “That’s a fact” rebuttal
43 Saloon souvenirs
46 Old Testament book before
Esth.
48 Break bread
49 Computer on an airplane
tray table
50 Unravel at the edge, as
threads
53 Switch positions
54 Move, in real estate lingo
55 Switch partner
56 Fully cooked
58 All over again
59 Low in fat
60 Soldier’s group, a member
of which might be stationed
at the start of 17-, 27-, 47or 62-Across
63 Old vitamin bottle no.
64 Once __ while
Crossword answers on page 18
($3–$4), such as beet puffs with truffle sauce
— “kind of a chicherron of beets,” our server
explained. Or like an Asian shrimp cracker, but of
bi-colored veggies (pureed, ground, dehydrated,
deepfried, etc.) with a heady hint of truffle.
You could stop right there, or continue to the
main courses, all well under $20, including a
miso-marinated sea bass on rice noodles, whose
broth is showered tableside. The plate’s rim is
painted in dual sauces: hoisin and sriracha. Or
the free-form lasagna, a vegetarian role model of
tender pasta with tiny herbs and veggies silhouetted right within it, coddling a kale ragout with
basil gel. Oh, and the braised duck with beans
and molasses sauce — call it a revised New
England staple or Stewart’s vision of cassoulet:
hearty, fork-tender, robust and tasty. (Next time:
warm lobster salad with shaved asparagus. Or the
Wagu burger withed with foie gras, a la Manhattan’s Daniel but at one-third the price.)
Desserts ($5–$7) confound, as you knew
they would. And delight (you knew that, too.)
There’s a beyond-pretty ice-cream sandwich — a
petite, gift-wrapped bundle of peanut flavor (also
praline, brittle, etc.) and hazelnut-fudge sauce
— and our second go, the not-to-be-missed
“coffee and donut.” A bitty espresso cup delivers
espresso crème brulee with a hint of cardamom,
with two mini-donuts perched at the rim (think
State Fair. Stewart did.) Accessible, interesting
wines, beers, and cocktails, too. Hennepin
Avenue never tasted so good!
Fritz Kroll
612.347.8088
Ben Johnson
612.347.8058
Jamar Hardy
612.347.8054
Brady Kroll
612.347.8050
Jessica Miceli
612.347.8033
Susan Lindstrom
612.347.8077
Brian Nelson
612.913.6400
Mary Beattie
612.347.8052
Steven Strand
612.347.8024
Tony Videen
612.347.8063
Christopher Friend
612.827.5847
Josh Kaplan – Mgr.
612.347.8049
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16 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
Voices
The Weekend Tourist
LINDA KOUTSKY
Sometimes subtle
changes can mean
your parent is not
doing as well as
they could be.
Maybe it’s time
for a little help.
Call us today for
a consultation
appointment.
Augustana Apartments
1510 11th Ave S, Minneapolis
612.238.5255
Augustana Health Care Center
1007 E 14th St, Minneapolis
612.238.5344
AugustanaCare.org
You can’t beat the view — 2,000 years ago or today. Photos by Linda Koutsky
A SPIRITUAL SITE
WITH SWEEPING
VIEWS OF THE
MISSISSIPPI
T
E AU
TU
RIG
N GAM
AM
AN
D AHH
AR
S TWWEEAR
A RI NG
I N GTHE
T H ETAVENER,
HEDDA,
FEF AT
R IN
AN
DA
E EAR
ST
P HOTO
O T OG
GR
R APH
A P H E D AT
AT THE HEA
RST C
TLE
PH
ARST
C AA SSTLE
NEW BRIGHTON
SA INT PAUL
2 0 5 0 S I LV E R L AKE ROAD
10 8 9 G R A N D AV E N UE
NE W B RI G HTON , MN 5 5112
SA I N T PAUL , MN 5 510 5
6 51. 6 3 6 . 3434
6 51.7 97.4 8 34
BU RNSV IL L E
MINNEA POLIS
2 0 01 B U R NSV I LLE CENT ER
24 0 5 H E N N E P I N AV E N UE
B U RNSV I LLE , M N 5 5 3 0 6
MI N N E A P OL I S , MN 5 54 0 8
952.892.6666
612 .5 84 .4 14 2
Spectacle Shoppe SWJ 100914 6.indd 1
10/2/14 10:40 AM
his is one of the oldest parks in the
metro area (established in 1893) and
has some of the oldest tourist sights
in the state. The original people who
chose this destination felt it had a spiritual
presence — I think you will, too.
Thirty nine mounds, from just under 2 feet
high to the 15-foot tall one that’s still there,
were located on Dayton’s Bluff overlooking
the Mississippi River. Only six remain today.
The others were destroyed by farming, road
building, park planning, and development. It’s
a great park with a sweeping view and all of us
should cycle this into our park visits because
not many metropolitan Downtowns have
their own prehistoric sites. And these mounds
deserve our appreciation.
The six on Dayton’s Bluff are most likely the
oldest mounds from this site and probably date
from between 200 B.C.–400 A.D. Nobody
knows for sure though because no artifacts have
been excavated in modern times to carbon date
them. There are plenty of other mounds along
the Mississippi including the effigy mounds in
Iowa shaped like bears and birds and the flattopped pyramids in Illinois. No other mounds
are located north of here on the Mississippi but
we have many more throughout the state near
Mille Lacs, Itasca State Park and Lake of the
Woods. Similar mounds have been excavated
and dated. Others with round bases like these
typically date from the Middle Woodland era
(200 B.C.–400 A.D.)
But just because we can’t date artifacts from
these mounds doesn’t mean they’ve been left
alone. Today it’s a felony to disturb a burial
ground but these mounds were accessed in the
mid- to late-1800s by several people — bad
and good. Theodore H. Lewis cofounded the
Northwest Archeological Survey and over the
course of 15 years documented nearly 7,700
burial mounds in Minnesota and several thousand more in Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, and the
Dakotas. He opened them up, documented the
artifacts, then closed them up again. In these
A few of the mounds located on
Dayton’s Bluff.
mounds he found skeletons, mussel shells,
a stone tool, arrowheads, a bone awl, wood
planks, a ceramic pipe, shell beads, hammered
copper breastplates, a bear tooth, a copper ornament, mussel shell spoons, and a piece of lead
ore. Some of the items were made locally; some
traded with other tribes.
Lewis noted in 1896 there were 10 villages in
the area: along the river, at Pig’s Eye Lake, and
at Phalen Creek. No evidence has ever been
found that they lived up near the mounds; it’s
too far from water to be practical. Perched high
on a bluff overlooking the Mississippi River, this
was a ceremonial resting place for these ancient
peoples’ ancestors.
We’ve got about 12,000 burial mounds in the
state and a few thousand right here in the metro
area. In fact, Lake Minnetonka has many —
thus the town name: Mound. This park makes
a peaceful getaway to appreciate the mounds’
graceful curves, the meandering river below,
and both skylines in the distance. Two thousand years later, it’s still a special place.
Send your comments or tips to
WeekendTourist@mnpubs.com.
Indian Mounds Park 10 Mounds Blvd., St. Paul
Dinner break Go for the signature 10 oz. New York strip steak with a side of
roasted forest mushrooms at nearby Strip Club Meat & Fish (378 Maria Ave.)
Union Bank & Trust DTJ 100914 6.indd 1
9/18/14 2:54 PM
journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 17
Voices
Ask Dr. Rachel
RACHEL ALLYN
TIPS FOR REDUCING STRESS
ON THE JOB
Q
How can I find ways
to reduce stress while
I’m at work? The answer to this question has two layers.
The first layer involves using your body as a
resource. I’m always surprised by how many
clients don’t realize (or simply forget) they
can calm themselves on the spot by utilizing
their breath. After all it’s free, you don’t need a
prescription and it’s effective. How we breathe
has an immediate impact on our nervous
system. Whether we’re breathing effectively
is the difference between having a nervous
system and having a chronically nervous
system. It doesn’t take more than checking-in
to see if you’re actually breathing fully and then
letting out long exhalations to train your body
to release tension. With practice, the physical
benefit will be long lasting and your mind will
follow suit. Editor’s note
This is Dr. Rachel Allyn’s debut
column for the Journals. She will
be answering questions about
health and wellness.
Direct questions to her at
Rachel@DrRachelAllyn.com.
In addition to breathing, use the senses to
soothe yourself. Our senses are constantly
absorbing the outer environment and
providing information to our brain about
whether we’re safe or not. Having silence or
mellow music in the background compared
to loud sounds can be the difference between
responding versus reacting in a tense moment.
Have some calming Essential Oils at your desk
such as lavender and dab it behind your ears.
This break can also be a mental reminder to
reset and shift perspective: you’re just under a
work deadline, not being chased by a bear.
The second layer is less immediate but also
requires the act of letting go, as well as some
honest self-reflection. It’s about recognizing
beliefs you hold about yourself in relation
to work. Are you a people-pleaser? Do you
overly-identify with your job? Are you a
workaholic to distract from other aspects
of your life you don’t want to face? Do you
micro-manage and take on too much because
you need control? Often these beliefs are part
of old stories that may have made sense and
worked for you in the past but are creating
difficulties in the present.
For example, if you’re a people pleaser the
first step is recognizing it’s impossible to avoid
disappointing another person at some point
and this is simply part of being human. Plus,
you’ll no doubt deplete yourself by trying to
be everything to everyone. Set an intention to
Using essential oils can be an effective way to beat stress.
say “no” to a small request in your day and see
what happens. You’ll likely find out that things
don’t fall apart, people respect you for having
boundaries and you’re more refreshed for
other priorities in your life.
Focus on 10 long exhalations three times
as day as a physiological and symbolic way to
release stress held in your body.
Explore the limiting beliefs you have about
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depend on NARI.
Let us customize
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The NARI logo is a registered
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NO BUTTS ABOUT IT
available
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In the Heart of the Beast
Puppet and Mask Theatre
Please Properly Dispose Of Your Litter.
(Butts are not bio-degradable).
Minneapolis Downtown Improvement District
Minneapolis DID Ambassador Hotline: 612.332.1111
www.MinneapolisDID.com
Mpls DID DTJ 2011 Filler 9.indd 1
Dr. Rachel Allyn is a licensed psychologist
in private practice. Learn more about
her unique style of therapy at
DrRachelAllyn.com. Send questions
to Rachel@DrRachelAllyn.com.
EVERYBODY
NEEDS A LITTLE
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Visit narimn.org or call 612-332-6274
to find a NARI-certified professional
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THIS IS LITTER.
yourself and the ways they’re interfering with
how you want to give your time and energy.
Offering performances,
residencies and touring shows.
since 1973
612.721.2535 · hobt.org
PLEASE DONATE To be an active supporter
of In the Heart of the Beast, you can make a gift online
or mail a check to 1500 E. Lake St., Mpls, MN 55407
4/29/11 In4:27
the PM
Heart of the Beast SWJ 2014 9 filler.indd 1
28th & Hennepin in Uptown
Where adults 50+ can interact,
relax and be inspired.
Come and check out
the contemporary center
in the heart of
downtown Minneapolis.
The UCare® Skyway Senior Center provides a safe, accessible and
friendly place for people 50 and over to socialize, take a class,
exercise, connect to community resources, use a computer, read,
relax and chat with others over a cup of coffee.
950 Nicollet Mall, Suite 290 (Target/Retek Building)
Call 612.370.3869 to get the free newsletter | Monday-Friday 9am-3pm
8/27/14 11:49
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18 October 9–22, 2014 / journalmpls.com
Calendar
Scene
Jennifer Easton Community Spirit
Awards
Traditional and contemporary poets,
musicians and dancers will perform to
honor four Native artists — Douglas Limón,
Delbert Miller, Jody Naranjo Folwell-Turipa
and Anton Treuer — for their commitment
and contributions to their communities
and culture at this event sponsored by the
First People’s Fund.
Oct. 18, 7:30 p.m. The Cowles
Center for Dance and Performing Arts,
528 Hennepin Ave. thecowlescenter.org.
206-3600. $25
Jane Wunrow
Local salon Foiled Again will host the
artwork of Jane Wunrow, whose recent
mixed media works juxtapose geological
formations with intricate and whimsical
illustrations, exploring both our connection
and distance from the natural world.
Opening Oct. 11, 7–9 p.m. Foiled
Again Salon, 2807 Johnson St. N.
janewunrow.com. foiledagainsalon.com
Disenchanted!
Unhappy with their treatment throughout
film and literature, traditional fairytale
princess such as Cinderella and Snow
White decide to take control of their
destiny in this musical comedy.
Oct. 31–Nov. 23. Illusion Theater,
528 Hennepin Ave. illusiontheater.org.
339-4944. $28-$38
A Steady Rain
Two long-time friends, both Chicago
policemen, have their friendship thrown
into question after a domestic disturbance
call turned sour places them in a moral
gray area.
Oct. 14–Nov. 2, Guthrie Theater, 818 S.
2nd St. guthrietheater.org. 377-2224.
$29–$39
Doorways to the Underworld
The debut exhibition of the Minneapolis
Collective of Pagan Artists, who work in
a variety of styles, and share a reverence
for nature, and who feel this time of year
is a chance to remember those who have
passed away.
Opening Oct. 25, 7:30–11 p.m. On
display through Nov. 15. Stevens Square
Center for the Arts, 1905 3rd Ave. S.
stevensarts.org. 879-0200
LIVE MUSIC
Reformation and Transformation
A musical worship celebration featuring
keyboard, vocal and handbell music
emblematic of the struggle from darkness
to light. The evening benefits Operation
Bootstrap Africa, which provides a broad
Guy Noir: The Ballet
James Sewell Ballet presents a murder mystery ballet production based
on the Prairie Home Companion segment “Guy Noir” in this a collaboration
with Garrison Keillor.
Oct. 24–Nov. 2, The Cowles Center for Dance and Performing Arts, 528
Hennepin Ave. thecowlescenter.org. 206-3636. $25–$36
E
AG
ST
ON EXHIBIT
N
O
ON STAGE
range of educational programs to the
world’s most impoverished citizens,
including college scholarships.
Oct. 25, 5:30 p.m. Central Lutheran
Church, 333 South 12th St.
centralmpls.org. 870-4416
since performed with acts such as Donald
Fagen, Prince and George Clinton. They
take to the stage this October to perform
the music of George and Ira Gershwin.
Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 12, 2 p.m. Cowles
Center for Dance, 528 Hennepin Ave.
thecowlescenter.org. 206-3636. $40
Anthem
The vocal ensemble Cantus opens its
2014–15 Fall season with this program the
celebrates the power of music to bring
people together the world over.
Oct. 16, 7:30 p.m. The Cowles
Center for Dance and Performing Arts,
528 Hennepin Ave. cantussings.org.
435-0055. $30
ETC.
The Steeles
The group of five siblings has been singing
together since their childhood, and have
Mississippi Minute Film Festival
Winners of the Mississippi Minute Film
Festival will premiere at the third annual
Riverfront Summit.
Monday, Oct. 20, 5:30 p.m. Mill City
Museum, 704 S. 2nd St.
minneapolisriverfrontpartnership.org
SAVE THE DATE!
Downtown Minneapolis
Neighborhood Association’s
ANNUAL MEETING
DATE: Tuesday, October 21 | TIME: 6:30pm
LOCATION: Minneapolis Depot, 225 3rd Avenue South
Elections to the DMNA Board will be held at this meeting.
People interested in running for the board should send their contact information to the
info@thedmna.org email address. You must live, work or own property in the Downtown East
and/or Downtown West neighborhoods to run for a seat on the DMNA Board.
Two 12 Pottery DTJ 100914 H12.indd 1
10/2/14 10:35 AM
CROSSWORD ANSWERS
liVe MusiC: SUN @5PM
THUR/FRI/SAT @9PM
ARRIVE EARLY TO SOCIALIZE AND ENJOY HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS FROM THE STONE ARCH BAR
AGENDA
S PO NSOR E D BY
Downtown
com
Welcome and DMNA Update
Board Chair Nick Cichowicz
Elections to the DMNA Board of Directors
D
DIG
IG IN
INT
TO
O
A
AD
DA
AG
GO
O!!
7th Ward Update
Council Member Lisa Goodman
“Around the DMNA in the Year 2016”
FEATURING
OUR HOMEM
ADE
ITALIAN SA
USAGE
A virtual tour of downtown Minneapolis in 2016
ONLY $5.
SERVED 8A 50!
M-12:30AM
3rd Ward Council Member Jacob Frey
Celebr
our 61 staYting
ear!
MI
12T
HAPPY HOU
SPECIALS R
MO
Crossword on page 15
226 Washington Ave N • 612.347.8000
N-FRI 2-6PM
1319 MARSH
ALL ST NE
MINNEAPO
LIS
DUSTYSBARA • 612-378-9831
NDDAGOS.CO
M
Dusty's Bar DTJ 111413 V18.indd 1 11/6/13 10:17 AM
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4
WA
S
Special topics include:
A) Homelessness — Street Outreach Program
B) Crime and Safety — Downtown East Substation
presented by representatives of the
1st and 2nd Precinct
C) Downtown Families — Webster School Update
D) Businesses — Challenges and opportunities
Election results / Thank you
Board Chair Nick Cichowicz
Mix & Mingle After the Meeting Concludes
DMNA, 40 South 7th Street Suite 212, PMB 172
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402
(612) 659-1279 • info@thedmna.org • www.thedmna.org
journalmpls.com / October 9–22, 2014 19
Fall Over Coffee
The speaker series presented by Lutheran
Church of the Good Shepherd is set to host
Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges.
Oct. 16, 7–8:15 p.m. Lutheran Church of
the Good Shepherd, 4801 France Ave.
S. goodshepherdmpls.org. 927-8849
Meat Raffle at Patrick’s Cabaret
A fundraising event for the arts organization,
to feature artist-designed games, dancing,
an auction and meat raffle.
Oct. 25, 7 p.m. Patrick’s Cabaret, 3010
Minnehaha Ave. S. patrickscabaret.org.
724-6273. $10 in advance, $15 at
the door.
Buckthorn Pull with Friends of the Wild
Flower Garden
Join volunteers from the Friends of the
Wild Flower Garden to help rid the garden
from invasive buckthorn. No gardening
experience is necessary for volunteers.
Oct. 18, 2–4:30 p.m. Eloise Butler
Wildflower Garden, Theodore
Wirth Parkway & Glenwood Ave.
minneapolisparks.org. 370-4903
Explore the North Loop
Purchase tickets that give you access to
view condos, apartments and businesses
in the North Loop and learn about the upand-coming neighborhood.
Oct. 11, 2–6 p.m. North Loop
neighborhood. northloop.org. $15 in
advance, $20 day of event.
Fix-It Clinic
Bring in your gear, gadgets, appliances and
clothing in need of a tune-up and receive
free assistance from volunteers with repair
skills, with a goal to reduce the amount of
items thrown into the trash.
Oct. 11, 12–4 p.m. North Regional
Library, 1315 Lowry Ave. N. hennepin.us.
348-3000
NEFMHarvestGala.eventbrite.com.
$15, $20 at the door.
FanatiCon
Hear from representatives of Minnesota
brands like Minnesota Wild and 3M on this
panel discussion about the power of brand
advocacy, and how passionate consumers
and fans have the power to make or break
even the largest brands.
Oct. 23, 7:30–9:30 a.m. Dakota Jazz
Club, 1010 Nicollet Mall.
Harvest Gala
This third annual event celebrates the
local food community, bringing together
farmers, chefs, artists and local food
enthusiasts for an evening to benefit the
Northeast Minneapolis Farmers Market.
Oct. 16, 6–10 p.m. Solar Arts
Building, 711 15th Ave. NE.
To be considered for inclusion in the
calendar, please submit entries to
calendar@journalmpls.com
Marketplace
AUTO CARE
PARKING
Jessie’s Auto Body
$7.75
7 Government Center Ramp
7.75
(415 S 5th St)
1515 29th Ave NE, Mpls • 612-789-7291
your
Save on ce
n
ra
u
s
in
ble
deducti
government
$6.25 Jerry Haaf Memorial Ramp
(424 S 4th St)
Collision damage • Body work and paint
Full mechanical • Restoration and rust work
We buy repairables
@thejournalmpls
REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS
schools
people
condo financing
Brian Peterson: 612.347.8045
realtors
$8.00 11th & Marquette Ramp
(1111 Marquette Ave)
Lynn Morgan: 612.347.8059
Jessica Miceli: 612.347.8033
Steven Strand: 612.347.8024
Christopher Friend: 612.827.5847
Ben Johnson: 612.347.8058
Susan Lindstrom: 612.347.8077
Tony Videen: 612.347.8063
$6.25– $7.00
7 ABC Ramps
7.00
(1st & 2nd Ave N)
Jamar Hardy: 612.347.8054
$7.25
7 Leamington Ramp
7.25
(1001 2nd Ave S)
parks
List your business
here for as little
as $69/issue.
$6.50 Hawthorne Trans Center
(31 N 9th St)
rental agent
Call 612-825-9205
Today!
careers in real estate
Josh Kaplan, Mgr: 612.347.8049
downtown
com
226 Washington ave n
612.347.8000
TO PLACE AN ADVERTISEMENT CALL 612.825.9205
WELLNESS, HEALTH, & FITNESS
Sick of cloudy,
clunky glasses?
Northern Sky Community Acupuncture
Acupuncture in a comfortable group setting
Sliding scale $15-40
Deborah Owen L.Ac. M.Ac.
YOGA & WELLNESS CENTER
Experienced, Gentle, Effective
612-708-8917 · www.northernskyca.com
NO CUTTING!
Our office is on the Mall.
612-338-4861
Drnealsher.com
for One Month
FOR YOUTH DEVELOPMENT®
FoR HealtHY liVinG
FOR SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Neal A. Sher, MD is an expert in
Laser Vision Correction.
The best local coverage
39
$
Come in for a consult for
Laser Vision Correction
Unlimited Yoga
Classes
(Reg. $139)
Minneapolis Downtown YMCa
30 South Ninth Street, Minneapolis, MN 55402
(P) 612-371-9622 (W) minneapolisymca.org
jeromeostores
Furniture | Asian Antiques | Art
Essential Oil Bar | Handmade Jewelry
250 3rd Ave N, Mpls | 612-339-4977 | jeromeo.com
Local contractors
EXTERIORS
PAINTING
3 Generations Strong
Foley exteriors
Since 1965
STUCCO
Call today!
George Welles
Certified Arborist #MN-0354
Lynn Welles
Certified Arborist #MN-4089A
(612) 789-9255
www.northeasttree.net
• Installation
• Repair
• Sanding
• Refinishing
Free Estimates, Insured • 14 years experience
952-292-2349
BLUE LADDER PAINTING
“We take pride
in our work so you
can take pride in
your home.”
LANDSCAPING
Service Tree Care Including Pest
& Disease Management
• Free Estimates • Stump Grinding
• Trained & Courteous Staff
• Expert High Risk & Crane Removals
ESCOBAR
HARDWOOD FLOORS, LLC
Local services.
Local references.
Local expertise.
5% OFF
Free Estimates • 612-331-6510 • www.FoleyExteriors.com
• Full
FLOORING
CALL ME
FIRST!
612-239-9658
Professional interior
painting service
specializing in
condos and lofts
Call Kevin McNealey:
(612) 825-1809
(612) 685-0210
Licensed • Bonded • Insured
MISCELLANEOUS
PLACE AN AD 612.825.9205
LD
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$149.50 per month
$9.00 per day*
$6.25 Early Bird WAS
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212 9th Avenue S.
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$80.00 per month
$6.00 per day*
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$6.00 per day*
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$10.50 per day*
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Wells Fargo
AutoBank
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$7.50 per day*
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25 S. 11th Street
$185.00 per month
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Walker
Art
Center
ON
IFT
CL
PL
15TH ST N
LAKESIDE AVE
17TH ST N
Vineland Place Ramp
LYNDALE AVE S
ALDRICH AVE N
ALDRICH AVE N
BRYANT AVE N
VE
L
A
ND TE
RRA
CE
VE A
VE
LAS AVE
LET AVE
ALDRICH AVE S
11TH ST N
Emerson
School
S
VE
TA
BR
YA
N
N
VE
S
VE
WE
ES
T
PL
5
HIG
H