St. Paul police investigate reports of racist flyers found in Union Park

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St. Paul police responded to reports of flyers with racist messaging and language in the Union Park area late last week and are encouraging residents to report if they see any more.

Officers met with a resident on the morning of Oct. 2 who found flyers with “racially motivated biases” in the street of the 1600 block of Sherburne Ave, according to Nikki Muehlhausen, a St. Paul Police Department public information officer. Officers also recovered laminated flyers with hate speech from the 400 block of Fry Street the same afternoon, Muehlhausen said in an email to the Pioneer Press.

Police also responded to other areas to collect flyers including Cleveland Avenue between Roblyn Avenue and Carroll Avenue, Feronia Avenue between Prior Avenue and Lynhurst Avenue and the 2000 block of St. Anthony Avenue/St. Anthony Avenue between Dewey Street and Prior Avenue.

Residents who see additional flyers are encouraged to report them to St. Paul police. The more reports the department receives, the more it is able to take action, such as additional patrols in the area, said Sgt. Toy Vixayvong, a St. Paul Police Department public information officer on Monday.

Investigators are working to see who is responsible for the flyers, Vixayvong said.

St. Paul Ward 4 City Council Member Molly Coleman said Friday that her office received reports of the flyers around the Merriam Park area. The flyers are “horrific” and “shockingly racist,” Coleman said.

Vixayvong said residents should follow the motto of “see something, say something.”

Residents who find additional flyers are encouraged to file an online police report at stpaul.gov/departments/police/file-police-report.

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Dillon Donnelly: Why is St. Paul building rec centers while families can’t afford rent?

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The city of Saint Paul is spending money from lower-income neighborhoods on things like splash pads for recreation centers, while what matters most to many families is covering the basics — paying rent and buying groceries.

Families look at their budgets at the kitchen table asking: Where can we cut back to cover the basics? City Hall needs to take the same approach.

One area where St. Paul should cut spending is in our parks and recreation budget.

This isn’t about caring less. It’s about making sure we’re solving the problems people are actually facing — and being honest about whether our spending is helping the people who need it most.

Since 2018, the city’s budget has grown from $625 million to a proposed $887 million for 2026 — a 42% increase, while inflation rose about 29% — a steep jump that outpaces the cost of living.

The parks and recreation department’s annual budget is now up to $88 million — a 44% increase since 2018. On top of that, voters approved a $246 million sales tax for park and other projects over the next 20 years — a regressive tax that hits lower-income families hardest.

City Hall calls this an investment — but an investment needs a return.

Where are the transformational results?

With this level of spending, the return should be progress on our biggest challenges. Yet one in four St. Paul kids still don’t graduate high school, and nearly 20% of the city still lives in poverty. City Hall is busy building around poverty instead of building a way out of it.

That’s the opportunity cost.

Meanwhile, with commercial revenue down and barely any population growth, more of the city’s property tax burden is landing on homeowners — especially in lower-income neighborhoods where home values are rising the fastest.

When we look at the needs of the neighborhoods giving the most they have to give, all this spending feels deeply unfair.

On the East Side, families have been clear about what they need — and it’s not more recreation centers.

The Saint Paul & Minnesota Foundation’s East Metro Pulse survey, which regularly polls thousands of local residents, shows just how thin the margin is: Nearly eight in ten worry about affording food, half say housing costs are tough, child care strains seven in 10  families, and most renters doubt they’ll ever be able to retire.

We have good parks and rec facilities. With all the funding, broken doors have been fixed, grass has been planted, kids are playing sports. Over 96% of residents rate our parks and outdoor spaces favorably.

But here’s the tension: Families are struggling to cover the basics — while the city’s outsized parks and recreation spending drives up rent and grocery costs.

So, we should cut 7.5% — about $6.6 million — from the parks and recreation budget.

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If we go back to the family at the kitchen table, they’re focused on the essentials. City Hall should be too.

Here are priorities we’re not funding. Let’s change that.

St. Paul faces a retirement boom that could cost the city 100 police officers in the next few years. Parking enforcement officers — who handle critical services and provide one of the best pipelines into the force — number only 10 citywide, 20 fewer than needed, while Parks and Recreation employs 634 full-time staff.

Struggling areas in St. Paul — like the CVS on Snelling and University, the old Sears site, and the downtown riverfront — have become monuments to inaction, reminders that city priorities need to shift to today’s realities.

Even in Parks and Recreation, with all the funding, the basics are falling behind. After losing tens of thousands of trees to the emerald ash borer, the city still loses thousands more each year, but despite a promise to replace them this work isn’t fully funded — leaving neighbors waiting at least five years for a tree.

Or — instead of more funding for rec centers and programs — City Hall could just give the money back to the people who really need it.

Dillon Donnelly lives with his family in St. Paul.

Social Security Administrator Frank Bisignano is named to the newly created position of IRS CEO

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By FATIMA HUSSEIN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Social Security Administration Commissioner Frank Bisignano was named to the newly created position of CEO of the IRS on Monday, making him the latest member of the Trump administration to be put in charge of multiple federal agencies.

As IRS CEO, Bisignano will report to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who currently serves as acting commissioner of the IRS, the Treasury Department says. It is unclear whether Bisignano’s newly created role at the IRS will require Senate confirmation.

The Treasury Department said in a statement that Bisignano will be responsible for overseeing all day-to-day IRS operations while also continuing to serve in his role as commissioner of the Social Security Administration.

Bessent said in a statement that the IRS and SSA “share many of the same technological and customer service goals. This makes Mr. Bisignano a natural choice for this role.”

The move to install Bisignano at the IRS adds another layer to the leadership shuffling that has occurred at the agency since the beginning of Trump’s term. Bessent was named acting commissioner in August after Trump removed former U.S. Rep Billy Long from the role less than two months after his confirmation, and made him ambassador to Iceland.

The four acting commissioners who preceded Long in the job included one who resigned over a deal between the IRS and the Department of Homeland Security to share immigrants’ tax data with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and another whose appointment led to a fight between former Trump adviser Elon Musk and Bessent.

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With two day jobs, Bisignano joins a number of other Trump administration officials to wear multiple hats, including Bessent, Marco Rubio, Sean Duffy, Jamieson Greer and Russell Vought.

IRS and Social Security advocates expressed concern about the new appointment.

Kathleen Romig, director of Social Security and Disability Policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, pointed to Bisignano being named to a position that appears to avoid Congressional approval.

“If the Trump Admin asked for the Senate’s advice & consent, would they really want the same person running the government’s biggest program AND overseeing the implementation of the extraordinarily complex new tax law?” she said on the Bluesky social media app.

And Nancy Altman, President of Social Security Works, an advocacy group for SSA recipients and future retirees, said Bisignano’s “divided attention will create a bottleneck that makes the inevitable problems that arise even harder to correct. Never in Social Security’s 90-year history has a commissioner held a second job. Bisiginano’s new role will leave a leadership vacuum at the top of the agency, especially since the Republican Senate hasn’t even confirmed a deputy commissioner.”

Bisignano has served as chair of Fiserv, a payments and financial services tech firm, since 2020. He is a onetime defender of corporate policies to protect LGBTQ+ people from discrimination.

Groups sue EPA over canceled $7 billion solar program intended to help poorer Americans

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By ALEXA ST. JOHN and JENNIFER McDERMOTT, Associated Press

Several groups and nonprofit organizations filed a lawsuit Monday against the Environmental Protection Agency over the canceling of a $7 billion Solar for All program intended to make solar power accessible to more than 900,000 lower-income Americans.

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They say the Trump administration’s termination of the program was illegal and they want a federal judge to direct the EPA to reinstate it. The program is affiliated with another $20 billion in green funding also terminated under President Donald Trump that EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin had characterized as a fraudulent scheme fraught with waste.

The EPA said in an email Monday that it does not comment on litigation.

The lawsuit is the latest legal action against the administration amid its assault on clean energy policy and related funding and programs across the country. Trump has moved to boost production of fossil fuels such as oil, natural gas and coal.

The lawsuit filed in Rhode Island by the Rhode Island AFL-CIO labor organization and others — including the public interest law center Rhode Island Center for Justice and the nonprofit Solar United Neighbors — detailed the importance of the program for local workforces and lower-income communities looking for access to clean-energy project funding.

Patrick Crowley, president of the Rhode Island AFL-CIO, said Monday that the program’s termination kills jobs and will drive up electricity prices.

EPA rescinded Solar for All in August

The Solar for All money was rescinded after Trump’s massive tax and spending law passed in Congress in July. Zeldin said in a statement on social media at the time, “the bottom line is this: EPA no longer has the statutory authority to administer the program or the appropriated funds to keep this boondoggle alive.”

The groups argued in the lawsuit that the law only revoked climate grants not yet awarded by the EPA and that these solar funds were already awarded.

“The Trump administration’s rollback of the Solar for All program is a shameless attempt to prop up fossil fuel companies at the expense of families,” said Kate Sinding Daly, senior vice president for law and policy at the Conservation Law Foundation, one of the nonprofit legal advocacy groups representing the plaintiffs.

“This program would provide families with low incomes access to clean, affordable solar power: energy that lowers bills, improves air quality, and keeps people safer during extreme heat,” she added in a statement.

The lawsuit cites previous EPA estimates that the program would have saved recipients about $400 each year on electricity bills and cumulatively reduced or avoided greenhouse gas emissions by over 30 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.

The program was part of a larger, climate-friendly funding push

The $7 billion Solar for All program was part of the $27 billion “green bank,” formally known as the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. It was established in the Democratic-backed climate law passed in 2022 under former President Joe Biden.

The other $20 billion, canceled by the Trump administration in March, was slated for eight community development banks and nonprofit organizations for tens of thousands of projects to combat the effects of climate change, such as residential energy efficiency projects to larger-scale investments such as community cooling.

Groups have also sued over the cancelation of that money — with a federal judge saying they must have access to some of the funds — though recently, an appeals court ruled that federal officials can move forward with its termination.

Trump’s assault on environmental policy and regulation

The Trump administration has targeted a host of programs and policies dedicated to clean energy.

Just last week, the administration canceled $7.6 billion in grants for hundreds of climate-friendly projects across 16 states. It has also interfered with nearly complete offshore wind developments, moved to rescind the crucial ‘endangerment finding’ that allows climate regulation, is looking to end greenhouse gas emissions reporting requirements for large polluters, and taken a slew of other deregulatory measures.

Read more of AP’s climate coverage.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.