St. Croix River Historic Cruise to raise money for historical society

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The history of the St. Croix River will be the featured topic during next week’s St. Croix River Historic Cruise, a fundraiser for the Washington County Historical Society.

The cruise, which will be 5:30-8 p.m. Tuesday, will be narrated by Stillwater Gazette columnist Angie Hong.

Hong will discuss historic points along the river, which “has been used as a main thoroughfare for centuries,” said Brent Peterson, the society’s executive director.

The fundraiser includes the river cruise, appetizers and a full cash bar. Tickets, which are $60 per person, must be purchased in advance.

Boarding begins at 5:30 p.m. at the Stillwater River Boats dock, located at 525 S. Main St., Stillwater. The boat leaves the dock at 6 p.m. and returns at 8 p.m.

For more information, call the Washington County Historical Society at 651-439-2298 or visit www.wchsmn.org.

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Target and Ulta mutually agree not to renew partnership launched in 2021

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NEW YORK — Target and Ulta Beauty are parting ways, ending a partnership launched in 2021 that created in-store shops filled with beauty products at hundreds of the discounter’s stores.

According to a joint release issued Thursday, the companies said they have “mutually agreed” not to renew their pact, which concludes in August 2026. Until then, the Ulta Beauty experience at Target will continue in Target stores and on Target.com, the release said.

Ulta is currently in 600 of Target’s roughly 1,980 stores, according to a Target spokesperson.

“For 35 years, Ulta Beauty has revolutionized how people experience beauty — bringing together an unmatched assortment from mass to luxury — and our partnership with Target was one of many unique ways we have brought the power of beauty to guests nationwide,” said Amiee Bayer-Thomas, chief retail officer of Ulta Beauty, in a statement.

Rick Gomez, executive vice president and chief commercial officer at Target, said in a statement he was committed to “offering the beauty experience consumers have come to expect from Target.”

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The partnership was announced in 2020 and came as the coronavirus pandemic upended shopping habits and more people tried to minimize potential exposure to the virus through one-stop shopping. COVID had dampened sales of lipstick as people wore masks, but the skincare business enjoyed stronger sales.

The shops are about 1,000 square feet and carry makeup, skincare, and fragrance and operated beside existing beauty sections in Target stores. The deal was a way for both Target and Ulta to increase their customer base.

“It’s a combination of two winning retailers that have great momentum in the market that can redefine the category,” Target CEO Brian Cornell told The Associated Press back in 2020.

The announcement comes as Target is struggling to regain its footing with its shoppers who are pulling back on discretionary items and are shopping at other rivals that they believe to be lower price or offer better merchandise.

Target is slated to report its fiscal second-quarter results on Wednesday.

In September 2022, Target extended its contract for its chairman and CEO Brian Cornell for another three years. It has not announced its succession plan.

MN GOP senators demand transparency in Stillwater prison closure

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Minnesota lawmakers are calling for more transparency and a public hearing on the Stillwater prison’s closure as hundreds of inmates have already been transferred.

The gradual closure of the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater in Bayport was announced on May 15 as part of a budget deal, but it quickly drew pushback from lawmakers, correctional staff and unions who said there was no notice or public discussion of the decision.

Five Republican senators — Warren Limmer, Michael Kreun, Karin Housley, Jeff Howe and Torrey Westrom — recently sent a letter to the Judiciary Committee chairs asking to schedule a public hearing on the closure.

“Prior to the announcement of Stillwater’s closure, there were no committee hearings to discuss the closure, so it was a shock to hear it was placed in the final budget bill without any input from legislators, officers, or family members of those incarcerated,” said Limmer, R- Maple Grove. “A change like this deserves proper vetting. Gov. Walz and his Department of Corrections Commissioner did a great disservice to the public when they circumvented that process.”

As of July 25, Stillwater’s population had been reduced from 1,120 to 802, including inmates who have been released, the DOC told Forum News Service. The DOC plans to further reduce Stillwater’s population to 550 by mid-September, according to the Aug. 8 letter from the Senate Republicans.

Senators wrote that given this “aggressive timeline,” the public should be afforded a hearing as the closure unfolds.

“Even though the plan has been set in motion by Governor Walz and Commissioner Schnell, the public deserves the opportunity to engage and provide feedback throughout this process,” said Kreun, R-Blaine.

Most inmates from Stillwater have been transferred to Oak Park Heights — the closest facility — with 84 moved there. Another 78 have gone to Lino Lakes, 44 to Rush City, 37 to Faribault and 10 to Moose Lake, according to July 25 reports from the DOC.

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In a statement from the Department of Corrections in July, the agency confirmed that inmates do not have a say in where they are being moved.

“Facility transfers and placement decisions prioritize medical and mental health continuity, educational and rehabilitative programming, and to the extent possible, proximity to support systems as is required by law,” the DOC said. “As planning continues, we welcome the input and suggestions of impacted incarcerated persons.”

The phased closure of Stillwater is expected to conclude by June 2029. Paul Schnell, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Corrections, said in May that the decision was driven by the facility’s deteriorating infrastructure.

Why a successful redistricting effort in Minnesota is unlikely

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Minnesota has thus far stayed out of the “redistricting fight” as states like Texas and California butt heads over potentially gaining more congressional seats ahead of the midterm elections.

The push was prompted by President Donald Trump encouraging Republicans in Texas to redraw their maps, and some blue states, such as California, responding with threats to do the same. Though the effort hasn’t been initiated in Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz said earlier this month at Farmfest that this isn’t a situation where Democrats can “go high.”

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. (AP Photo/Matthew Putney,File)

“We’re not dealing with a normal situation; we can’t on this say, ‘When they go low, we gotta go high,’” Walz said. “When they violate the law and gerrymander, if we don’t do something about this, they are going to game this system, take these votes away, and potentially switch a midterm.”

Minnesota’s eight congressional seats are currently divided between parties. The state is required to redistrict every census year, and the Legislature draws up maps and attempts to pass those maps similarly to how it handles bills.

Since 1980, partisan gridlock in Minnesota’s split Legislature has prevented lawmakers from agreeing on new maps, leaving redistricting to the courts.

“The Democrats write a map that they want, Republicans write a map,” Walz said. “And then the judges say, ‘Oh, isn’t that sweet? Those are gone.’ And they create fair maps.”

Split Legislature

The Minnesota Legislature is currently effectively split. The House is currently split 67-66 with the Republicans at a one-seat advantage. If a DFLer wins a special election for Rep. Melissa Hortman’s seat, the House will return to a 67-67 tie.

David Schultz, professor of political science and legal studies at Hamline University, said Monday that “given how polarized the state is,” he doesn’t see the Legislature agreeing on a new congressional map.

“Essentially, it’s a split Legislature, and it takes 68 votes to pass anything in the House of Representatives,” he said. “I cannot see any situation here where … any Republican would agree to voting for any plans sponsored by the Democrats that would result potentially in the Republicans losing … one or more seats in the House of Representatives.”

Legislative deadlock aside, Schultz said it’s unlikely Democrats could find a new seat to pick up. If anything, it would be the 2nd Congressional District, which is considered the most competitive of Minnesota’s eight seats. U.S. Rep. Angie Craig announced her bid for the U.S. Senate on April 29 , leaving the seat up for grabs come 2026.

Alex Plechash, chair of the Minnesota Republican Party. (Courtesy of the City of Wayzata)

“Maybe you might be able to redistrict in a way that makes the 2nd Congressional District — Angie Craig’s — a little bit safer for Democrats, but I don’t know how you could draw district lines in a way to make Emmer’s or Fischbach’s or Stauber’s or the 1st District certain to be Democrats,” Schultz said. “I mean, the Democratic votes are just not there in those four congressional districts.”

Alex Plechash, chairman of the Minnesota Republican Party, said Thursday he thinks Minnesota has generally managed redistricting well in comparison to other states.

“My sense is that Minnesota is one of the states that actually has handled this pretty well, overall,” he said. “It can get very contentious between the parties. Gerrymandering, of course, is the thing that people fear on both sides, and there have been … extreme examples of gerrymandering in the boundaries to favor one party or the other.”

Plechash said he would support a bill sponsored by Rep. Paul Torkelson, R-Hanska, in the 2025 legislative session to create a bipartisan redistricting commission.

In 2021, after the last census, the state narrowly avoided losing one congressional seat altogether. Schultz said that by 2030, the state of Minnesota may lose a seat if population doesn’t grow faster.

California responding to Texas

Walz hasn’t initiated any plans in Minnesota to redistrict ahead of 2030, but said California is “going to have to respond” to Republican efforts in Texas.

“In this situation, if California is going to have to respond to Texas, they’re going to have to,” he said. “It is bad for democracy, it’s bad for the country, but what’s worse for the country is a totalitarian president who gerrymanders districts in his favor with no response from us.”

Andrew Karch, professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, said Wednesday that even if Minnesota isn’t expected to see its own efforts, Walz’s comments are likely to lend support to his Democratic colleagues.

“A Democratic politician, especially one who has sort of a national profile like Governor Walz, probably wants to lend support to his fellow partisans and express solidarity with what they’re doing,” Karch said. “Even if, in this state, any sort of action is unlikely.”

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