2019 Minnesota House of Representatives Minneapolis and Saint Paul
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August 26, 2019 Minnesota State Legislature 75 Rev. Dr. Martin
August 26, 2019 Minnesota State Legislature 75 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. St. Paul, MN 55155 Adele Gagliardi, Administrator Office of Policy Development and Research U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW Room N-5641, Washington, DC 20210 RE: U.S. DOL Industry Recognized Apprenticeship Programs Implementation Proposed Rule - RIN 1205-AB85 Administrator Gagliardi: As Legislators from all across the State of Minnesota, we write to affirm the value of Registered Apprenticeship programs in training the safest, most highly skilled construction workforce for the State of Minnesota, and to express our support for the permanent exemption for the construction industry in the proposed rule: Apprenticeship Programs, Labor Standards for Registration, Amendment of Regulations (1205-AB85). There are currently over 10,000 Registered Apprentices in Minnesota in more than 50 privately funded construction Registered Apprenticeship Programs training to be our State’s future plumbers, electricians, iron workers, crane operators, laborers, carpenters and other highly skilled trades workers. Registered Apprenticeships have been the pathway for more women and minorities to enter the construction trades and Minnesota contractors, business owners, and communities rely on Registered Apprenticeship programs to train our future construction workers to grow our State’s economy and ensure our safety. Unfortunately, if expanded to include the construction industry, the proposed rules would undermine the integrity and drive down the training and labor standards in construction Registered Apprenticeship programs, setting off a race to the bottom in Minnesota’s construction industry. Minnesota is not willing to jeopardize the quality of its construction and the safety and security of its construction workforce. -
October/November 2018
MINNESOTA EDUCATOR OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2018 Organize, organize, organize: MFT ESPs engage with members all summer long MEA is here: everything you need to know before Oct. 18 Table of contents October/November 2018 – Volume 21, No. 2 The Minnesota Educator publishes every other The Minnesota National Board month. It is one of the union’s print and digital Certified Teacher Network provides publications to educate, inform and organize the community of members. The Educator is reported, support for Education Minnesota edited and designed by union staff members. The members applying for certification. paper is printed in LSC Communications’ union shop in Menasha, Wisconsin. Find copies of the page 6 Educator online at www.educationminnesota.org. Go to the News menu, then Minnesota Educator. Union members at St. Cloud To reach the publication for queries, Technical and Community story or commentary ideas College organize a “Great Big Email: [email protected] Giveaway” for students. Mail: Minnesota Educator 41 Sherburne Ave. page 7 St. Paul, MN 55103 To report a change of address or end Everything you need to know duplicate mailings, contact the Education about the MEA Conference, Minnesota membership department. including workshops, featured Email: [email protected] By web: www.educationminnesota.org and choose speakers, exhibitors and more. the Contact Us link to send a change of address. pages 9-12 To inquire about advertising in the Educator or on the website Thousands of worksite action Email: [email protected] Phone: 651-292-4864 leaders start on plans to motivate For general inquiries and business their colleagues to vote. -
Protect Minnesota Orange Star Leaders MN State Legislature As of June 1, 2019
Protect Minnesota Orange Star Leaders MN State Legislature As of June 1, 2019 Orange Star members have shown themselves to be committed to saving lives by passing gun violence prevention bills. It’s very important that we communicate our sincere thanks to these legislators... Orange Star MN Senate Members 51 Jim Carlson 40 Chris Eaton 52 Matt Klein 45 Ann Rest 59 Bobby Joe Champion 49 Melisa Franzen 41 Carolyn Laine 7 Erik Simonson 57 Greg Clausen 19 Nick Frentz 46 Ron Latz 63 Patricia Torres Ray 64 Richard Cohen 67 Foung Hawj 58 Matt Little 43 Charles Wiger 48 Steve Cwodzinski 62 Jeff Hayden 66 John Marty 50 Melissa Wiklund 61 Scott Dibble 42 Jason Isaacson 37 Jerry Newton 60 Kari Dziedzic 53 Susan Kent 65 Sandra Pappas Orange Star MN House Members These members all voted to pass the Criminal Background Checks and ERPO bills in 2019. 44B Patty Acomb 62B Aisha Gomez 20B Todd Lippert 52B Ruth Richardson 34B Kristin Bahner 51B Laurie Halverson 60A Diane Loeffler 53B Steve Sandell 42B Jamie Becker-Finn 52A Rick Hansen 61B Jamie Long 25B Duane Sauke 41A Connie Bernardy 62A Hodan Hassan 67A Tim Mahoney 7A Jennifer Schultz 57A Robert Bierman 66A Alice Hausman 56B Alice Mann 36A Zack Stephenson 19A Jeff Brand 64A Kaohly Her 65B Carlos Mariani 55A Brad Tabke 56A Hunter Cantrell 61A Frank Hornstein 51A Sandra Masin 40B Samantha Vang 50B Andrew Carlson 50A Michael Howard 42A Kelly Moller 63B Jean Wagenius 45A Lyndon Carlson 57B John Huot 65A Rena Moran 38B Ami Wazlawik 39B Shelly Christensen 44A Ginny Klevorn 33B Kelly Morrison 46A Ryan Winkler 54A Anne Claflin 37A Erin Koegel 03B Mary Murphy 14B Dan Wolgamott 19B Jack Considine 48B Carlie Kotyza-Witthuhn 40A Michael Nelson 67B Jay Xiong 63A Jim Davnie 41B Mary Kunesh-Podein 60B Mohamud Noor 53A Tou Xiong 59B Raymond Dehn 59A Fue Lee 07B Liz Olson 46B Cheryl Youakim 49A Heather Edelson 66B John Lesch 05A John Persell 49B Steve Elkins 26A Tina Liebling 64B Dave Pinto 36B Speaker Melissa Hortman 43A Peter Fischer 4A Ben Lien 27B Jeanne Poppe 45B Mike Freiberg 43B Leon Lillie 48A Laurie Pryor . -
Minnesota Citizens for the Arts
MINNESOTA Vote Citizens for the Arts Legislative Candidate Survey 2016 smART! The election on November 8, 2016 will have a huge impact on the arts and on our country. If you agree with thousands of Minnesotans who believe that the arts matter, you’ll want to know where legislators stand. IMPORTANT: Visit the Secretary of State’s website to fnd out your district and where to vote: http://pollfnder.sos.state.mn.us/ READ: We’ve asked all legislative candidates fve questions about current arts issues so they can tell you how they would vote. Due to limited space, comments were limited to 3 sentences. To see full responses visit our website at www.artsmn.org ALL STARS: Look for the symbol telling you which legislators have been awarded an Arts All Star from MCA for their exceptional support for the arts at the legislature! CONNECT: With MCA on Facebook, Twitter @MNCitizen, and our website www.artsmn.org. We’ll make sure you stay informed. ASK: If your candidates didn’t respond to the survey, make sure to ask them these questions when you see them on the campaign trail! ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Minnesota Citizens for the Arts is a non-partisan statewide arts advocacy organization whose mission is to ensure the opportunity for all people to have access to and involvement in the arts. MCA organizes the arts com- munity and lobbies the Minnesota State Legislature and U.S. Congress on issues pertaining to the nonproft arts. MCA does not endorse candidates for public ofce. MCA’s successes include passing the Clean Water, Land and Legacy Amendment in 2008 which created dedi- cated funding for the arts in the Minnesota State Constitution for the next 25 years, and the Creative Minnesota research project at CreativeMN.org. -
MINNESOTA NURSING Accent Winter 2018 | Volume 90 No
MINNESOTA NURSING Accent Winter 2018 | Volume 90 No. 3 Nurses build power during elections In this issue • Nurses say ‘yes to invest’ – page 5 • Take your advocacy to a new level: run for office - page 17 • Where do you dues go?– page 18-22 2 minnesota nursing accent Feature Story Minnesota Nursing Accent Nurses power = leadership influence Minnesota Nurses Association 345 Randolph Avenue, Ste. 200 On Nov. 6, shortly after he and his running mate, Peggy Flanagan were elected Gov- Saint Paul, MN 55102 ernor and Lieutenant Governor, Tim Walz stood at a podium in front of about 2,000 DFL 651-414-2800/800-536-4662 Winter 2018 supporters at the election night party. He accepted the applause of the crowd, thanked PUBLISHER Flanagan, and then turned to the crowd to thank his volunteers, especially labor. Rose Roach “We couldn’t have done this without you,” Walz said. MANAGING EDITORS Walz pointed out the MNA nurses who showed up and cared about this election and Barb Brady their incredible dedication to volunteering to elect candidates they believed in. Chris Reinke Nurses participated in canvasses to get out the vote statewide, supporting candidates BOARD OF DIRECTORS President: who earned the nurses’ endorsement and share nurse values on issues. Mary C. Turner, RN MNA members made 100,000 phone calls to fellow nurses and like-minded voters 1st Vice President: over the last year in preparation for the 2018 elections. Allies and friends commented that Bernadine Engeldorf, RN 2nd Vice President: MNA nurses in their red shirts were all over the state, at every volunteer opportunity. -
AMSD Member Districts Minnesota House of Representatives 2017 1
AMSD Member Districts Minnesota House of Representatives 2017 House School District District Legislator Twitter Facebook Anoka-Hennepin 31A Kurt Daudt @kdaudt http://www.facebook.com/KDaudtMN 31B Cal (Calvin) K. Bahr @calbahrsd31 https://www.facebook.com/Bahrforhouse/ 34A Joyce Peppin @JoycePeppin http://www.facebook.com/joycepeppin 35A Abigail Whelan @abigailWhelan https://www.facebook.com/WhelanforHouse 35B Peggy Scott N/A https://www.facebook.com/PeggyScottForMNHouse 36A Mark Uglem N/A http://www.facebook.com/repmarkuglem 36B Melissa Hortman @melissahortman https://www.facebook.com/MelissaHortman 37A Erin Koegel @erinma14 https://www.facebook.com/erinformn 37B Nolan West N/A https://www.facebook.com/NolanWestforMinnesota 38A Linda Runbeck @lindacrunbeck http://www.facebook.com/pages/Linda-Runbeck-for-MN-House/113284255359047 40B Debra Hilstrom @debrahilstrom http://www.facebook.com/debra.hilstrom 41A Connie Bernardy @conniebernardy https://www.facebook.com/RepConnieBernardy/ Bloomington 49B Paul Rosenthal @PaulRosenthalMN http://www.facebook.com/citizensforrosenthal 50A Linda Slocum N/A https://www.facebook.com/linda.slocum.79 50B Andrew Carlson N/A https://www.facebook.com/ElectAndrewCarlson/ Brooklyn Center 40B Debra Hilstrom @debrahilstrom http://www.facebook.com/debra.hilstrom Burnsville-Eagan-Savage 51A Sandra A. Masin @Masin4Rep https://www.facebook.com/pages/Sandra-Masin/120752178235 51B Laurie Halverson @LaurieHalverson http://www.facebook.com/pages/Representative-Laurie-Halverson/415376705222306 55A Bob Loonan @BobLoonan https://www.facebook.com/BobLoonanforHouse -
2018 Election Directory of the Minnesota Legislature
2018 ELECTION DIRECTORY for the 2019-2020 MINNESOTA LEGISLATURE Minnesota House of Representatives Nov. 7, 2018 2019-2020 House Membership Statistics List as of Nov. 7, 2018 59 Republican members 75 DFL members 86 members are men 48 members are women 46 Republican men 40 DFL men 13 Republican women 35 DFL women Newly elected members 39 newly elected members 5 newly elected Republican members 34 newly elected DFL members 29.1 percent of 2019-20 members did not serve last session 20 newly elected members are men 19 newly elected members are women 86.4 percent of incumbents on the ballot were re-elected 15 Republican incumbents lost (includes Rep. Jim Knoblach who suspended his campaign Sept. 21) 0 DFL incumbents lost 24 seats were open at the time of the election 2 races were uncontested (Mahoney, Pelowski, Jr.) New House DFL members Patty Acomb ................................. 44B Dave Lislegard ................................ 6B Kristin Bahner.............................. 34B Jamie Long .................................... 61B Robert Bierman ...........................57A Alice Mann ................................... 56B Jeff Brand ......................................19A Kelly Moller ..................................42A Hunter Cantrell ............................56A Kelly Morrison ............................. 33B Michelle (Shelly) Christensen .... 39B Mohamud Noor ........................... 60B Anne Claflin .................................54A John Persell .....................................5A Heather Edelson ..........................49A -
Pocket Edition 2019.Indd
Minnesota Legislative Manual Blue Book 2019-2020 Pocket Edition TABLE OF CONTENTS Minnesota Facts .......................................................................................................... 3 State Symbols .............................................................................................................. 4 State Historic Sites ...................................................................................................... 7 State Song ................................................................................................................... 8 State Parks ................................................................................................................... 9 National Parks ........................................................................................................... 10 Vital Statistics............................................................................................................ 11 Higher Education ...................................................................................................... 13 Civic Engagement ..................................................................................................... 14 Flag Etiquette ............................................................................................................ 15 Pledge of Allegiance .................................................................................................. 15 National Anthem ..................................................................................................... -
House Select Committee on Racial Justice Report to the Legislature
House Select Committee on Racial Justice Report to the Legislature December 22, 2020 House Select Committee on Racial Justice: Report to the Legislature Table of Contents I. Background ...................................................................... 3 A. Enabling Resolution .............................................................. 3 B. Select Committee Membership ............................................ 4 II. Select Committee Meetings ........................................... 5 III. Definitions ..................................................................... 7 IV. The Minnesota Paradox ............................................... 11 V. Select Committee Recommendations .......................... 38 VI. Appendices .................................................................. 45 Reader Note: This report summarizes public testimony and articles provided by members of the public to the Select Committee. The report is therefore a summary of the statements and positions taken by those presenting to the committee. To the extent feasible, we have included citations and links to the actual testimony. The result is a readable summary of testimony that often draws from sources that may not all be cited herein. 2 House Select Committee on Racial Justice: Report to the Legislature I. Background A. Enabling Resolution The House Select Committee on Racial Justice (“Select Committee”) was established by the Minnesota Legislature in 2020 (see Minnesota Laws Second Special Session 2020, House Resolution 1, Appendix A) to declare -
State of Minnesota & Washington County Elected
STATE OF MINNESOTA & WASHINGTON COUNTY ELECTED OFFICIALS ELECTED TERM OFFICE LOCAL OFFICE OFFICE DISTRICT YEAR HOLDER ADDRESS ADDRESS The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Donald J. Washington, D.C. 20500 4 Trump 202-456-1414 President Republican [email protected] 2016 http://www.whitehouse.gov Old Executive Office Building 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Michael R. Washington, D.C. 20501 4 Pence 202-456-2326 Vice President [email protected] 2016 Republican http://www.whitehouse.gov/vicepresident 1200 Washington Ave South 302 Hart Senate Office Building Amy Room 250 Washington, DC 20510 United States 6 Klobuchar Minneapolis, MN 55415 202-224-3244 Senator 2018 DFL 612-727-5220 www.klobuchar.senate.gov 60 Plato Blvd. East 309 Hart Senate Office Building Tina Smith Suite 220 Washington DC 20510 United States 6 DFL St. Paul, MN 55107 202-224-5641 651-221-1016 www.smith.senate.gov Senator 2014 12940 Harriet Avenue S. 1523 Longworth House Office Building 2 Angie Craig Suite 238 Washington, D.C. 20515-2303 United States 2 Burnsville, MN 55337 202-225-2271 2018 DFL 651-846-2120 https://craig.house.gov/ Representative 661 LaSalle Street 2256 Rayburn House Office Building Betty Suite 110 Washington DC, 20515 United States 4 2 McCollum St. Paul, MN 55114 202-225-6631 651-224-9191 https://mccollum.house.gov/ Representative 2016 DFL 315 Canon House Office Building 9201 Quaday Ave NE Washington, DC 20515 Tom Emmer Suite 206 202-225-2331 United States 6 2 Republican Otsego, MN 55330 https://emmer.house.gov Representative 2016 763-241-6848 130 State Capitol 75 Rev Dr. -
Minnesota House of Representatives Bonding Bill Roll Call Vote Total 75 Yea and 57 Nay
Minnesota House of Representatives bonding bill roll call vote Total 75 yea and 57 nay. Does not meet required 81 yea votes to pass. July 20, 2020 44B DFL Rep. Patty Acomb Minnetonka Y 55B R Rep. Tony Albright Prior Lake N 12B R Rep. Paul Anderson Starbuck N 12A R Rep. Jeff Backer Browns Valley N 34B DFL Rep. Kristin Bahner Maple Grove Y 31B R Rep. Cal Bahr East Bethel N 17B R Rep. Dave Baker Willmar N 42B DFL Rep. Jamie Becker-Finn Roseville Y 27A R Rep. Peggy Bennett Albert Lea N 41A DFL Rep. Connie Bernardy New Brighton Y 57A DFL Rep. Robert Bierman Apple Valley Y 47B R Rep. Greg Boe Chaska N 19A DFL Rep. Jeff Brand St. Peter Y 56A DFL Rep. Hunter Cantrell Savage Y 50B DFL Rep. Andrew Carlson Bloomington Y 45A DFL Rep. Lyndon Carlson, Sr. Crystal Y Rep. Michelle (Shelly) 39B DFL Christensen Stillwater Y 54A DFL Rep. Anne Claflin South St. Paul Y 19B DFL Rep. Jack Considine Jr. Mankato Y 24B R Rep. Brian Daniels Faribault N 31A R Rep. Kurt Daudt Crown N 28B R Rep. Greg Davids Preston N 63A DFL Rep. Jim Davnie Minneapolis Y 59B DFL Rep. Raymond Dehn Minneapolis Y 13A R Rep. Lisa Demuth Cold Spring N 39A R Rep. Bob Dettmer Forest Lake N 21B R Rep. Steve Drazkowski Mazeppa N 03A DFL Rep. Rob Ecklund International Falls Y 49A DFL Rep. Heather Edelson Edina Y 49B DFL Rep. Steve Elkins Bloomington Y 15A R Rep. Sondra Erickson Princeton NV 01A R Rep. -
– 2015 – MINNESOTA LEGISLATIVE SCORECARD CLEAN WATER ACTION’S 2015 Minnesota Legislative Scorecard
– 2015 – MINNESOTA LEGISLATIVE SCORECARD CLEAN WATER ACTION’S 2015 Minnesota Legislative Scorecard Clean Water Action’s goal is to protect and restore our lakes, rivers and streams now and for future generations. We work to protect Minnesota’s health and water by making systemic change. We educate the public, develop grassroots citizen leaders and mobilize our members to get involved in policy decisions. This is a comprehensive scorecard for the 2015 legislative session and the special session that was held in June. Clean Water Action’s Legislative Scorecard provides a permanent record that scores every Minnesota state legislator on their votes that affect the issues of clean, renewable energy, water quality, and toxics in our environment. These were the primary areas of focus for Clean Water Action this year. To find out who your legislators are, visit http://www.gis.leg.mn/OpenLayers/districts/ HOW LEGISLATORS WERE SCORED: The Clean Water Action Legislative Scorecard provides objective, factual information about the environmental + = A pro-environment vote voting records of members of the Minnesota Legislature. – = An anti-environment vote The votes included in this scorecard took place during the 2015 legislative session and focus heavily, although not NA = The legislator did not vote exclusively, on votes that would seriously affect the issues of clean, renewable energy, water quality, and toxics in our environment. The votes that are included are recorded votes in which the entire body of either the Senate or House, had the opportunity to participate. Senate legislators were scored on 5 votes on important environmental issues acted on in 2015, with House legislators being scored on 7.