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Minneapolis Riverfront News

Covering life, work, and play in the Historic Mill District and Downtown Minneapolis Riverfront neighborhoods. Have an opinion, local news or events to share?  Contact us.

Sunday
Mar202016

In the News - News from Downtown & the Riverfront Neighborhoods

Thursday
Mar172016

Nicollet Mall Farmers Market Finds New Home This Season At Hennepin County Government Center South Plaza

Via a March 16 Press Release from the Minneapolis Downtown Council:

Nicollet Mall Farmers Market Finds New Home This Season At Hennepin County Government Center South Plaza

MINNEAPOLIS (March 16, 2016) — The Minneapolis Farmers Market, in partnership with Go Outsidewith Hennepin County, the Minneapolis Downtown Council and Minneapolis Downtown Improvement District, today announced that it will be open each Thursday this summer at a new location: Hennepin County Government Center South Plaza (300 S. 6th Street) in Downtown Minneapolis.

The Farmers Market will kick off Thursday, May 5 and will be open each Thursday from 6 am to 6 pm through the outdoor Farmers Market season ending November 10. The relocation is due to the Nicollet Mall Project construction, and the Farmers Market will be relocated to Nicollet once the project is complete. In 2015, the Thursday Farmers Market was located on Hennepin Avenue.

“We’re excited to bring the Farmers Market to a new area of downtown that continues to grow and thrive,” said Farmers Market Manager Pat Nelson. “Hennepin County Government Center’s South Plaza offers a fantastic green space that will allow patrons to gather, browse and shop in a convenient location.”

This year’s Farmers Market will feature the same products that customers have come to expect from the Nicollet Mall Farmers Market, including produce, flowers and an assortment of canned products. The location is just three blocks from Nicollet Mall, adjacent to the Government Center Light Rail stop at 3rd Avenue South & 5thStreet South, and nearby multiple bus stops, making it walkable and easily accessed by mass transit.

In addition to Thursday’s Farmers Market, Go Outside with Hennepin County will continue its summer programming at Hennepin County Government Center South Plaza each Wednesday from June 1 through August 31. Each Wednesday this summer from 11:30 am-1:30 pm, stop by the South Plaza for an assortment of activities and food options, including a rotating collection of food trucks, lawn games, a variety of seating options, and more.

“We want our downtown community to have opportunities to enjoy the summer weather,” said Hennepin County Administrator David Hough. “Our programming at Hennepin County Government Center South Plaza will provide an opportunity where you can grab your own lunch, play games, or bring fresh produce home for your family—all in one nearby spot.”

The Wednesday lineup followed by Thursday’s Farmers Market offers back-to-back days each week for workers, residents and visitors alike to get outside and enjoy summer in the heart of the city.

“As part of our 2025 Plan goals, we’re committed to creating a consistently compelling downtown experience filled with activities and events that are important to our community’s vitality,” said Minneapolis Downtown Council and Downtown Improvement District President & CEO Steve Cramer. “We’re excited about the Farmers Market and Go Outside with Hennepin County programming both being located at Government Center’s South Plaza, because it’s a great gathering space near the heart of our city that is located at an intersection point of our downtown core and the bustling Downtown East area.”

For more information and additional details on the Minneapolis Farmers Market, visit http://www.mplsfarmersmarket.com/ or follow along on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

About the Minneapolis Farmers Markets

The Minneapolis Farmers Markets—run by the Central Minnesota Vegetable Growers non-profit—are dedicated to bringing the highest quality, most delicious, fresh, sustainably farmed fruits, vegetables and farmstead products to its patrons, since 1876.  The Minneapolis Markets are a source for fresh produce and products for people all over the Twin Cities, and served by more than 230 vendors, with a main daily Lyndale Market and downtown site. Visit mplsfarmersmarket.com for events and information.

About Go Outside with Hennepin County

Go Outside with Hennepin County is an initiative that offers events and activities for the community. The Go Outside campaign focuses on programming Target Field Station, the downtown area’s premier transit hub, as well as the Hennepin County Government Center South Plaza. Visit Government Center South Plaza each Wednesday through August for yard games, board games, picnic tables, food trucks and treats on hand. Events at Target Field Station throughout the summer will feature fitness opportunities, a movie series and fun for all ages. For more information, visit downtownmpls.com/gooutside.

About the Minneapolis Downtown Council:

Founded in 1955, and one of the oldest central business associations in the nation, the Minneapolis Downtown Council (MDC) is a membership-based entity that works to create an extraordinary downtown. The MDC’s collaborative developments of Intersections: Downtown 2025 Plan was designed to help downtown businesses, community leaders and citizens build on downtown assets and implement future goals. For more information, please visit http://www.downtownmpls.com/.

About the Downtown Improvement District:

Founded in early 2009, after more than five years of formative planning and advocacy by the downtown business community, the Minneapolis DID delivers higher levels of service to make downtown cleaner, greener, safer and more vibrant throughout a 120-block area, as is the case with most Business Improvement Districts. For more information, visit http://www.minneapolisdid.com/.

Wednesday
Mar162016

Neighborhood Special Offer from Magna

Our friends at Magna asked us to pass along this special offer:

Through April 30, 2016, Magna is offering a FREE TRIAL WEEK of Strength and Conditioning. Then take $50 off your first month if you decide to join.

This program is about meeting you where you’re at, getting results, and making lifelong changes. Meet with a coach to establish your goals then get started on an individualized training program. Train with a coach up to 6 days a week at a time that works best for you. Membership includes unlimited access to the gym and group fitness classes that might be outside of your predetermined workout.

For more information email ask@magnausa.com or call 612-424-6840.

Wednesday
Mar162016

MPRB to Consider New Plan with City to Close Funding Gap for Neighborhood Parks

From a March 16 Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board e-newsletter:

Minneapolis Park Board to consider new plan with City to close funding gap for neighborhood parks

Today the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) and City of Minneapolis will consider a new strategy, in addition to the referendum and Charter Amendment discussions underway, to address the funding gap for neighborhood parks maintenance, repair and capital investments. Working in partnership, MPRB and City leaders developed a financial plan called the 20 Year Neighborhood Park Plan. 

At tonight’s March 16 Board meeting, MPRB Commissioners will consider a resolution approving a 20 Year Neighborhood Park Plan between the MPRB and the City and directing the Superintendent and MPRB Legal Counsel to prepare an ordinance to implement the 20 Year Neighborhood Park Plan for consideration on April 6, 2016 and final adoption on April 20, 2016.

In January the MPRB approved proposed ballot language for a November 2016 referendum for neighborhood park funding; however there are several benefits of the 20 Year Neighborhood Park Plan to the MPRB, the City and residents, including:
•Reduces property tax impact on Minneapolis residents
•Guarantees protection of current level of Local Government Aid and other funding  to MPRB
•Provides neighborhood park funds sooner to MPRB

Tonight’s March 16 Board meeting begins at 5 pm at MPRB Headquarters Board Room, 2117 West River Road. In addition to the resolution, the full meeting agenda can be viewed at https://minneapolisparksmn.iqm2.com/Citizens/Detail_Meeting.aspx?ID=1587. The Minneapolis City Council will also discuss the proposed plan at their 10 am meeting today at City Hall.

Efforts already underway will continue towards a November 2016 referendum or Charter Amendment to address neighborhood park funding. If both the MPRB and City approve concurrent 20 Year Neighborhood Park Plan ordinances this spring, efforts towards a November 2016 referendum will cease. If concurrent Ordinances are not approved this spring, efforts for a referendum or Charter Amendment will continue. 

For details about the state of Minneapolis’ neighborhood parks or the proposed ballot language, visit www.minneapolisparks.org/closingthegap.

Tuesday
Mar152016

New Local Exhibit Highlights History of High Wheel Bicycles

Via a March 14 Press Release from Hennepin History Museum:

NEW LOCAL EXHIBIT HIGHLIGHTS HISTORY OF HIGH WHEEL BICYCLES
Hennepin History Museum to host show by the Cycling Museum of Minnesota

Minneapolis, MN: High Wheels!, an exhibition curated by the Cycling Museum of Minnesota, will be on view at Hennepin History Museum March 29 through June 26, 2016.

Minneapolis' love affair with cycling began in the 1880s when the high wheel bicycle became widely available. In this decade, thousands of high wheels hit the streets, the first cycling clubs began to meet, and Minneapolis gained national prominence as a hot bed for six-day racing. While we may view the awkward looking high wheel as impossible to ride, this bicycle laid the groundwork for the even larger cycling boom of the 1890s and was a crucial stage in the development of today's bicycle.

High Wheels! is the latest exhibition to be presented Hennepin History Museum's Our Hennepin County gallery. According to Hennepin History Museum executive director Cedar Imboden Phillips, the gallery provides an opportunity to create and strengthen relationships between local arts and cultural organizations with a historical bent. "Cycling Museum of Minnesota brings a new curatorial voice into our space," Phillips notes, "and in turn we can help share their work and mission with a broader audience. The story of high wheel bicycles is a topic that is going to resonate strongly with our visitors, and we are thrilled to work with them on this exhibition."

High Wheels! is accompanied by a robust calendar of public programs and activities. An opening party, free and open to the public, is scheduled for Thursday, March 31, from 5 to 8 pm.

About Hennepin History Museum: Founded in 1938 as the Hennepin County Historical Society, Minneapolis-based Hennepin History Museum is dedicated to bringing the diverse history of Hennepin County and its residents to life through exhibitions, library, collections, publications, and educational programs. For more information, visit hennepinhistory.org or call 612.870.1329.

Visiting Information: Hennepin History Museum, located at 2303 Third Avenue in Minneapolis, is open Tuesday 10-2, Wednesday 1-5, Thursday 1-8, and Friday through Sunday 1-5. Admission is $5; $3 for seniors and students. The first Thursday of the month is always free. Visiting the museum at this time does require the use of stairs.

Monday
Mar142016

US Politics Razzmatazz: Impressions from Across the Pond – An Interview with Robert Francis

Minnesota is heralded for our Garrison Keillor “above average” populace. We have the highest rate of voter participation in the country. In 2008, according to George Mason University, 78% of eligible Minnesotans voted in the presidential election. Some Minnesota districts turn out more than 90%!

A while back CNN looked at why this might be: Our state boasts same day voter registration; has a highly engaged civic culture that segues with Robert Putman’s (Bowling Alone in America) theories about volunteerism contributing to a strong democracy – 38% of Minnesotans volunteer; education and awareness are high; we do not require voter ID; and we boast a vibrant political scene.

Yet, it is doubtful that even our exceptional citizenry understands all of the nuances of our electoral process. Ask an average citizen to define the difference between a democracy and a republic, many will likely falter. What about between direct and representational democracy? How the Electoral College works? Why some states have caucus systems and some primaries?

The United States is a Republic (many mouth these words in our patriotic Pledge of Allegiance but never stop to consider what that means).  A republic is similar to a representative democracy but with a written constitution that delineates basic rights, protecting the minority from being unrepresented or overridden by the majority. (Diffen)

With our current presidential primaries taking the global stage for a variety of reasons, not the least of which has to do with pure theatrical value, I wondered how some of my European colleagues view “the show.” Having lived in Europe for almost 10 years, earning my advanced degree in European Public Affairs from Maastricht University (Netherlands) and teaching there, consulting for a number of international NGOs, and lecturing in the European Parliament, I have a few executive level European experts to turn to.

I chose fellow Maastricht University classmate, Robert Francis, now a Director for the respected global consultancy Grayling Brussels (Twitter @TheEULobby). Francis has worked in the European Parliament, and as a UK national now living and working in the European Union’s main capitol city of Brussels, is able to offer a multi-layered, informed European perspective. 

 

The focus on individuals seems to be uniquely American - sure, Europeans know who head their parties, but there is also a bunch of Ministers, wannabe Ministers, and apparatchiks who do the rounds of interviews.
–Robert Francis, Director, Grayling Brussels

                                                                 ***

What are your overall impressions about how the United States conducts presidential elections?

To most Europeans, the US elections are a bit of a mystery. True, we know the main players and we see the razzmatazz, and we all have opinions about who we want to win - but when it comes to how many delegates each candidate needs, the "primaries", "super Tuesday" - these are all alien terms to us. My personal impression is that the campaigns are beginning earlier and the hype is like never before - Obama still has eight months to govern yet he has been a lame duck for the last six months. This does not seem to be very healthy for democracy, and not a good thing for the country. It has also stalled a number of initiatives, such as the EU-US trade agreement.

Please comment on our strict two-party system.

Two party systems are not particularly alien to Brits, who have grown up on a staple of Conservative-Labour politics since World War II, albeit with the coalition blip after the 2010 election. Yet far from ushering in a bright new future of coalition governments, the fallout from this has further strengthened the two party system, one party government.

On the European continent, coalition governing is the norm, and governments fall all the time as a result, even in stable prosperous countries such as the Netherlands. Belgium went 535 days without a government - a world record, yet life continued as normal (some even said it improved, since the caretaker government could only do what it had to, and didn't have a mandate to issue new proposals).

In Belgium there is a plethora of parties, with the French and Flemish communities having their own version of each party, which means forming a government involves solving a hugely complex equation. In comparison, perhaps the US model is actually very simple (though unworkable in a country like Belgium).

I don't think a two party system is particularly healthy, but there doesn't seem to be a solution in the US as anyone seen to be too left will be unelectable. It is noteworthy that if the Democrats were British, they would be right of centre, and even more right of centre if they were on the continent. Bernie Sanders seems to be shaking things up but he is the outsider candidate, and to European ears, most of what he says is not incredibly revolutionary.

What specifically do you observe in the current campaign, (from both parties)?

Trump has dominated the airwaves, even in Europe. Bluster, anti-immigration rhetoric, "telling it like it is" - the UK has our own version of this, known as the UK Independence Party, but they are nowhere near power. Trump, on the other hand, could be President. A scary prospect. France of course has the National Front, a party in the ascendancy and in Marine Le Pen a strong Presidential candidate. It is very tempting for Europeans to patronise the US, but they have their own populist, anti-immigrant, and protectionist parties in their backyard.

The Democrats have been in Trump's shadow, but most Europeans favour the softer, more sympathetic, less patriotic approach (Europeans generally don't put as much emphasis on the need to be patriotic - a few world wars put paid to that). Yet there is general ignorance even about the Democrats. Most Europeans don't know that Hillary supports the death penalty and would be horrified to know she does, but they would still favour her over Trump. Anyone but Trump, basically.

Can you contrast election politics with those of your individual Western European countries? The EU?

In the States it really is all show, but the UK is catching up with its own TV debates between Prime Minister candidates (even though you don't vote for an individual you vote for a party  - so it's all a bit of a sham).

Most elections are won on the local level, particularly in the UK, which operates a constituency, first past the post, system. If your local MEP kept the local hospital open, you won't mind voting for him/her even if you dislike their party. Hence, foreign issues, including EU concerns, take a backseat. There were mass protests around the Iraq War, but Blair still won a large majority afterwards.

Trump keeps saying he wants to "smash ISIS", but I don't know whether Americans will vote for him on that basis. Employment is probably a more important factor, as it would be in Europe.

As mentioned above, you would never start campaigning so far out from an election in Europe - most elections in the UK are called a few months in advance. There is longer preparation for EU elections, but the latter are often perceived as being of less importance, and news coverage is often rare.

The focus on individuals seems to be uniquely American - sure, Europeans know who head their parties, but there is also a bunch of Ministers, wannabe Ministers, and apparatchiks who do the rounds of interviews. In the US, the perception seems to be that it will be Trump v Hillary - who else will be in their team? Who knows? We don't.

Any additional comments?

The UK seems to be moving to an Americanization of politics, with the TV debates as an example. The UK is a lot more like the US in this respect, and Europeans are generally suspicious of the razzmatazz in the US - it is hard to imagine Merkel working the crowd like Hillary does, she is just not that sort of person. Europeans would take substance over style any day, and Merkel proves that.

When you hear Trump supporters saying they support him "because he is a successful businessman" - that is a very un-European approach. In fact, most Europeans would shy away from such a figure, so his appeal is also a mystery. Nigel Farage, the leader of UKIP, is also a businessman, but he likes to keep that quiet, and instead tries to be "one of us", literally having a pint in the local pub with "local people". Hard to imagine Trump portraying himself like that.

Susan Schaefer can be reached at susan@millcitymedia.org.

Sunday
Mar132016

Portland Avenue Closing for Downtown Commons Construction Beginning March 14

Via a March 11 e-newsletter from the City of Minneapolis:

Portland Avenue in Downtown Minneapolis Closing for Construction

Beginning at 9 a.m., Monday, March 14, Portland Avenue from Third Street to Fifth Street in downtown Minneapolis will close to traffic through early summer. The closing will allow construction of the Downtown Commons, a two-block, public green space being created in the Downtown East neighborhood. Drivers should follow posted detours and find alternate routes into and out of the downtown area.

As Ryan Companies constructs this area, the City is making pedestrian and bike improvements to the adjacent parts of Portland Avenue, Fourth Street South, Fifth Street South, and Park Avenue. These include off-street bike lanes, pedestrian bump outs at intersections and new sidewalks and pedestrian-level street lighting.

This is one of many construction projects that will affect traffic in Downtown this year. To help drivers know about all of the current and upcoming work, the City has mapped these projects. Links to the maps are available at www.minneapolismn.gov/publicworks/traffic.

Saturday
Mar122016

MPD ACTION ALERT - CASE NO. 16-086639 – BURGLARY OF DWELLING

From the Minneapolis Police Department:

CASE SUMMARY

Incident Location: 0009** 3 ST S

Date and Time:  3/12/2016 2:58:00 AM - 3/12/2016 3:05:00 AM

Primary Offenses:  Burglary Of Dwelling

Public Information:

Suspects tried to gain entry into building at the above location and time.  Suspects were interrupted by the owner, and were GOA upon officers arrival. ...

Arrested Parties, if any (name - age / Address AptNo City, State Zip):

NOTE: Any persons arrested in this incident were not necessarily charged with the listed offenses. Use the link provided below for a more complete explanation of the format of these alerts if anything is unclear.

=================================================

NOTE: Asterisks (**) indicate that a street address has been masked, and the incident took place on the “100 block” ,e.g., 0041** Stevens AV S took place on the 4100 block of Stevens Av S. We do not include the full address of incident locations in order to preserve the privacy of victims.

Friday
Mar112016

Plan Ahead for March 12 Get Lucky 7K Road Closures

The following parkways will be temporarily closed on Saturday, March 12, for the Get Lucky 7K event 8:00am-Noon (street closures vary between this 4-hour window):  Stone Arch Bridge, NE Main Street and West River Parkway. 

Click here to view a course map and read additional information on the event.

NOTE: The Mill City Farmers Market will be inside the Mill City Museum from 10:00am - 1:00pm. During the Get Lucky event, most streets surrounding the Mill City Museum will be clear by 9:45am. However, there will be no parking on 2nd Street from 3rd Ave. to Park Ave. until 9:45am. Plan to enter the market on Park Ave. or Chicago Ave., and use the parking lots in the area or meters to the east of Park & 2nd. Street. The Market is also easily accessible by bike and public transit!

Thursday
Mar102016

MPF and MPRB seek Water Works Final Design and Cultural Resource Consultants

Two Requests for Proposals released this week signal significant next step in bringing visionary expansion of Mill Ruins Park to life

This week the Minneapolis Parks Foundation (MPF) and the Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board (Park Board) together released two Requests for Proposals (RFP) for the Mezzanine Phase of Water Works, a Mississippi riverfront park development project. Water Works will be a cultural and recreational destination on the Minneapolis Central Riverfront that builds on the site’s rich mill history, dramatic historic and natural features, and urban riverfront location to provide a one-of-a-kind experience at St. Anthony Falls. Water Works is a RiverFirst signature project, a cooperative initiative to transform the Minneapolis Riverfront with four new connected riverfront parks and miles of new trails.

The design services RFP seeks landscape architecture and architecture-led teams for schematic design through construction administration of the $10.87 million Mezzanine Phase of Water Works. Construction will begin in 2017 and finalize in 2019. The Mezzanine Phase encompasses about 2.5 acres of the six-acre project area, from West River Parkway to 1St Street South, and Third Avenue to Portland Avenue. Construction of the later Riverside Phase of Water Works is slated to begin in 2021 and be completed in 2023. The Cultural Resources RFP addresses the entire Water Works site and will inform both phase one and phase two construction.

Aspects of the Water Works project were envisioned 30 years ago, when the Park Board and its partners created Mill Ruin Park. In 2015, the Park Board adopted the current Water Works conceptual design, which was created through a nearly three-year process with the community.

“With the release of these RFPs, we are taking a substantial step toward realizing the transformative Water Works design,” says Tom Evers, Executive Director of the Minneapolis Parks Foundation. “Developing this tremendous cultural asset has been a goal for many decades. Since 2012, the Minneapolis Parks Foundation, together with the Minneapolis Park Board and with passionate and dedicated community involvement, has been honored to breathe new life into the vision and see it through completion.”

The Water Works concept calls for unearthing and protecting the site’s historic mill ruins, while establishing a harmonious blend of natural and cultural features. Planned parkway and trail realignment will improve mobility throughout the site, which already sees nearly 2.5 million visits annually. A park pavilion will provide needed year-round amenities for the district, which encompasses popular attractions, including St. Anthony Falls and the Stone Arch Bridge.

Firms interested in responding to either RFP may download it from https://www.minneapolisparks.org/business_opportunities. Respondents to the Mezzanine Phase design services RFP mustare required to attend a mandatorythe pre-proposal meeting on Thursday, March 17. Proposals are due in April. A selection committee will evaluate submissions, interview shortlisted teams, and make a recommendation to the Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board of Commissioners for selection. MPF and the Park Board expect to announce team selection in May 2016 with work to begin immediately following.

Thursday
Mar102016

Minneapolis Sculpture Garden greenhouse, trees up for bid

Walk-through scheduled March 14; Bids due March 18

The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) is accepting bids on a maintenance greenhouse and select trees at the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden that will be removed before reconstruction begins in May. (Greenhouse pictured above right)


The trees identified for sale include six hackberries, three oaks and a maple, but bids will be accepted on other eligible trees. Please attend a scheduled walk-through on March 14 at noon for more information.

Winning bidders must provide all labor, hauling, equipment, permits and incidentals needed to remove the trees from the site. Removal work must be performed between April 25 and May 15 by a professional landscaping or tree company. See Informal Bid SF-1790 for more information.


The greenhouse resides just north of the Cowles Conservatory. The MPRB intends to have the it disassembled and placed on pallets as part of the upcoming reconstruction. See Informal Bid SF-1789 and Bid Addendum #1 for more information.

A walk-through is scheduled Monday, March 14 at noon for interested bidders. Meet in the parking lot west of the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden.

Wednesday
Mar092016

March 24 at Sanctuary: J. Carver Distillery Inspired Menu 

Sanctuary Executive Chef Patrick Atanalian has created this special one night menu (March 24) incorporating J. Carver Distillery gin, vodka and whiskey.  For reservations, call 612-339-5058 or go online.

Founded in 2013, J. Carver Distillery is located in Waconia.

  

Tuesday
Mar082016

Author James Eli Shiffer book launch event for The King of Skid Row: John Bacich and the Twilight Years of Old Minneapolis - April 7, Mill City Museum

Author James Eli Shiffer will give a talk on, and sign copies of, his new book The King of Skid Row: John Bacich and the Twilight Years of Old Minneapolis

BOOK LAUNCH:
7:00 PM, Thursday, April 7, 2016, Mill City Museum (704 S 2nd Street). The event will also include screenings of John Bacich's skid row home movies, and also launches the photograph exhibit "Skid Row Minneapolis." A cash bar will be available at 6:00 PM. Please include this event in your local events/arts calendar, or consider a review of the book. The author is available for interview and review copies are available upon request.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
City blue laws drove the liquor trade and its customers—hard-drinking lumberjacks, pensioners, farmhands, and railroad workers—into the oldest quarter of Minneapolis. In the fifty-cent-a-night flophouses of the city’s Gateway District, they slept in cubicles with ceilings of chicken wire. In rescue missions, preachers and nuns tried to save their souls. Sociology researchers posing as vagrants studied them. And in their midst John Bacich, aka Johnny Rex, who owned a bar, a liquor store, and a cage hotel, documented the gritty neighborhood’s last days through photographs and film of his clientele.

The King of Skid Row follows Johnny Rex into this vanished world that once thrived in the heart of Minneapolis. Drawing on hours of interviews conducted in the three years before Bacich’s death in 2012, James Eli Shiffer brings to life the eccentric characters and strange events of an American skid row. Supplemented with archival and newspaper research and his own photographs, Bacich’s stories recreate the violent, alcohol-soaked history of a city best known for its clean, progressive self-image. His life captures the seamy, richly colorful side of the city swept away by a massive urban renewal project in the early 1960s and gives us, in a glimpse of those bygone days, one of Minneapolis’s most intriguing figures—spinning some of its most enduring and enthralling tales.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
James Eli Shiffer has been a professional journalist for twenty-five years and is currently a columnist and editor at the Minneapolis–St. Paul Star Tribune. In 2010 he partnered with Ewen Media to create Rubbed Out, a multimedia history of the murder of a journalist in Minneapolis in 1945.

THE KING OF SKID ROW: John Bacich and the Twilight Years of Old Minneapolis
 
By James Eli Shiffer
 University of Minnesota Press | 192 pages | April 2016
ISBN 978-0-8166-9829-5 | hardcover | $22.95

PRAISE FOR THE KING OF SKID ROW:
"In its final years, Skid Row was avoided by everyone except the police, storefront Bible-thumpers, slumming sociologists, and the occasional entrepreneur such as John Bacich—‘Johnny Rex’ to the drunks, drifters, and down-and-outers he served as publican and hotelier. James Eli Shiffer recalls the life and times of Johnny, Polack Wally, Moon Face Mary Ann, and other late-stage denizens of that dingy corner of Old Minneapolis with insight, wit, and compassion. The King of Skid Row is terrific urban history, beautifully told." —William Swanson, author of Stolen from the Garden: The Kidnapping of Virginia Piper and Dial M: The Murder of Carol Thompson

"The King of Skid Row brings to boozy life the alcohol-sodden, corruption-filled era when Minneapolis’ lost Gateway District harbored flop houses, slop joints, cage hotels, brothels, and raunchy speakeasies filled with B-girls and ‘gandy-dancers.’ Exceptionally literate, relentlessly humane, Shiffer peels back the veil from a dark and often violent past that, until now, had been literally paved over and believed forgotten. The King of Skid Row is a deft book that stirs together memoir, mystery, and history with the heartbreaking drama of how a city treats its most despondent and destitute. Moving and fascinating." —Paul Maccabee, author of John Dillinger Slept Here: A Crook’s Tour of Crime and Corruption in St. Paul

For more information, including the table of contents, visit the book's webpage:
http://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/the-king-of-skid-row

Tuesday
Mar082016

March 15 Hewing Hotel (Historic Jackson Building) Instameet with Preserve Minneapolis

March 12 update from MNCommunity: We have unfortunate news that the Hewing Hotel Instameet is being postponed due to concerns from the Hotel Management company, Aparium Hotel Group due to the state of the building and the renovation work being done and the logistics of having a tour with a large group of people.

Via a March 7 e-newsletter from Preserve Minneapolis:

In collaboration with MNCommunity, Preserve Minneapolis will be hosting an Instameet (Instagram + meet-up*) at the Historic Jackson Building in the North Loop.

The Historic Jackson Building was built in 1897, and rehabilitation is underway to give the structure new life as the Hewing Hotel, opening later this year.

The Instameet will be a wonderful opportunity to get a sneak peek at this project. Join us to see preservation in action and to photograph and document the Jackson Building before renovation is completed.

Where: 300 Washington Avenue North, Minneapolis
When: Tuesday, March 15, 5pm-7pm
    Timeline of Events:
    5:00pm - 5:30pm ... Welcome
    5:30pm - 6:30pm ... Guided Tour of the Jackson Building
    6:30pm - 7:00pm ... Self-Guided Exploration Time
    7:00pm ... Post-Instameet Social Hour

More details on the Facebook event page (please RSVP so we can plan appropriately).
Cost: This event is free!

*What's an Instameet? Good question! Click here for an answer.
 

Monday
Mar072016

R.T. Rybak Book Launch for Pothole Confidential at First Avenue on April 13

Via a March 4 Press Release from University of Minnesota Press

R.T. Rybak book launch for Pothole Confidential at First Avenue on April 13

Minneapolis, MN, March 4, 2016 — Former Mayor R.T. Rybak will celebrate the launch of his new memoir, Pothole Confidential: My Life as Mayor of Minneapolis, with a night of local music, highlights from the book, and a book signing on Wednesday, April 13, 2016 at First Avenue in Minneapolis.

The 18+ event starts at 7:00 PM. Tickets are $10 and will be a fundraiser to support the City of Minneapolis STEP-UP youth employment program.

Rybak will give a behind-the-scenes tour of his years running the city of Minneapolis in between songs from featured musical acts:

Big Trouble + dVRG
With Special Guest Lucy Michelle and more TBA
Plus the World's Most Dangerous Polka Band

A signing with Rybak will follow the show and books will be available for purchase from Magers & Quinn Booksellers. Sebastian Joe's will be offering free ice cream scoops to attendees, including Rybak's favorite, The Flavor Formerly Known as Nicollet Avenue Pothole.

Pothole Confidential is a clear-eyed look inside the life and times of Minneapolis and its dynamic three-term mayor. In the words of Lizz Winstead, "This book is a love letter to Minneapolis and it tells the riveting story of what you must tackle to make and keep a city great." Rybak takes his readers into the highs and lows and the daily drama of a life inextricably linked with the city. Pothole Confidential is that rare document from a politician: one more concerned with the people he served and the issues of his time than with burnishing his own credentials.

EVENT DETAILS:
Our Minneapolis: R.T.'s Big Book Launch Party!
When: Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Where: First Avenue Mainroom, 701 North First Avenue, Minneapolis, MN 55403
Time: Doors 6:00 PM, Show 7:00 PM, Book signing with R.T. 8:30 PM
Tickets: $10, http://first-avenue.com/event/2016/04/rybak-booklaunch
18+
Fundraiser to support City of Minneapolis STEP-UP youth employment program

Sunday
Mar062016

In the News - News from Downtown & the Riverfront Neighborhoods

Sunday
Mar062016

Sarah Rasmussen joins The Jungle: Making the classics accessible

Blessed with as robust an arts community as any of the great world cultural centers, the Twin Cities regional theaters have recently witnessed a remarkable grand slam in leadership bringing in an exciting new generation of artistic directors.

Most notable, perhaps, is Joseph Haj replacing Joe Dowling at the venerable Guthrie Theater, our Starship on the banks of the Mississippi. Across the river, Randy Reyes has taken the reins from founding director Rick Shiomi at St. Paul’s Mu Performing Arts, preserving its esteemed reputation while branching out in his own fashion. Moving through a staged leadership transition alongside her renowned father, Lou Bellamy, daughter Sarah now co-directs Penumbra Theater Company.

Photo by Susan Schaefer.  Sarah Rasmussen at home in her new domain. 

If this triple crown of changes weren’t significant enough, another Sarah has returned to our city taking the helm of The Jungle Theater from its legendary founder and theatrical force, Bain Boehlke, rendering our thespian fortunes a grand slam indeed.

Sarah Rasmussen, who most recently served as Associate Professor and Head of the MFA Directing Program at the University of Texas at Austin, is no stranger to the Twin Cities. She is an alum of St. Olaf College in Northfield, with ties to the Playwright Center, Mixed Blood Theatre and Ten Thousand Things. Rasmussen hails from nearby Sisseton, S.D., situated in the Lake Taverse Indian Reservation, on the northern fringe of the Coteau des Prairies, a place that proclaims itself rich in Native American and immigrant history. 

Perhaps this heritage is one of the influences that mark Rasmussen’s self-proclaimed goals for great inclusivity and diversity in her upcoming tenure. If her brilliant debut staging of Shakespeare’s Two Gentlemen of Verona featuring an all female cast is any indication she delivers on her promise.

Appearing entirely at home in her new domain, Rasmussen welcomes me with a spot of Earl Grey tea and a seat on the cozy baroque couches that define the Jungle’s décor. Diffuse early morning light illuminates her animated discourse on why she chose this as her inaugural piece.

“I feel particularly fortunate to present ‘Two Gents’ with an all female cast at the same time Guerilla Girls have made the Twin Cities their focal point to introduce the ongoing disparity in gender representation in the arts,” she explains.

“If female directors don’t have experience,
 they can’t get hired, and if they can’t get
 hired, they can’t get experience.”

It is no secret that there is an astounding gender parity gap in theater. Movements such as Melody Brooks’ 50/50 in 2020: Parity for Women Theatre Artists, point to the stark reality.

“It truly seems ironic that such a gap exists in our field, a creative field, which you imagine is populated with progressive people,” she muses. Rasmussen is sincerely diplomatic in her assessment of why this seismic gap exists in her field. “To understand the problem you can take a simple view and say that men have been in charge.”

But now there are new realities that can govern how theater adapts to the changing demographics of both audience and participants. Rasmussen references Maureen Dowd’s New York Times articleabout Hollywood female executives and filmmakers where sexism is so rampant that a federal lawsuit is in the works. The article highlights what Girls’ creator Lena Dunham calls a dark loop, and Rasmussen states the quote almost verbatim: “If female directors don’t have experience, they can’t get hired, and if they can’t get hired, they can’t get experience.”

It’s time for the paradigm to change and Rasmussen believes the way to change is for women and people of color to speak up and speak out, and she is very optimistic that overall inclusivity is on a fast track, at least here. She was recently part of an MPR panel discussion with her new crop of Twin Cities’ artistic leaders – Haj, Reyes and Bellamy – who share almost precisely the same vision of inclusivity.

Rasmussen and her administration have made welcome changes that provide more access to wider audiences. The Jungle is offering new pricing for onstage seating, younger audiences, and neighborhood residents, as well more interactive experiences with pre- and post show discussions and informative talks.

Her philosophy is that masterworks have to be in conversation with audiences and the times. “I believe that classics can be both arty and intellectual, she concedes. “I’m a populist at heart. I think audiences want to be invited in. The Jungle will continue to tackle meaningful theater while being entirely mindful of audiences.”

If her inaugural production indicates the future, our community can expect high art classics rendered accessible to the populace.

Susan Schaefer can be reached at susan@millcitymedia.org.

Friday
Mar042016

35th Annual Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival, April 7-23

35th ANNUAL MSPIFF LINEUP ANNOUNCED

This year’s lineup includes more than 250 films – more than 160 features and more than 90 shorts – representing 71 countries. The Festival’s always highly anticipated Opening Night Presentation will be revealed later in March.

Thursday
Mar032016

Volunteer Coaching Opportunities with the Minneapolis Park and Rec Board

The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) is seeking enthusiastic volunteer coaches for youth baseball, softball, tee ball and track and field for the 2016 spring season.

• Practices start in April, games begin in May
• Athletes range from 5–18 years old
• Teams practice 1–2 times per week
• Games are scheduled for a weeknight and/or Saturdays
• MPRB will provide orientation for all new coaches

Become a volunteer!

Wednesday
Mar022016

Call for Contributions: Putting Down Roots Fiber Arts Project at MWMO

Call for Contributions: Putting Down Roots Fiber Arts Project

You are invited to participate in developing Putting Down Roots, a new eco-art exhibit to be on display at the Mississippi Watershed Management Organization (MWMO) and Nine Mile Creek Watershed District. Use any fiber medium to create a life-sized, 3-dimensional representation of plants for clean water and habitat and/or species that benefit from these plants.

Exhibition Dates: May 23, 2016 - Fall 2016
Location: Mississippi Watershed Management Organization and Nine Mile Creek Watershed District, 2522 Marshall Street NE

Putting Down Roots is an evolving exhibit of artistic fiber representation of plants that are beneficial for a healthy environment. These plants have extensive root structures, provide beautiful habitat and contribute to the diversity of our landscapes.

More information: http://www.mwmo.org/PuttingDownRoots.html