St. Paul: Downtown Development Corp. buys Capital City Plaza parking ramp

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The St. Paul Downtown Development Corporation has purchased the condemned Capital City Plaza parking ramp from Madison Equities with the goal of having it fully reopened by late 2026.

The ramp is located at 50 Fourth St. near the Alliance Bank Center, which the nonprofit corporation took full ownership over and site control of in October. Financial details of the transaction were not disclosed, but a spokesperson for the nonprofit said the purchase was fully funded by private investment “and will prevent the city from spending public funds to secure the property.”

The ramp, situated near the Green Line’s Central Station, was condemned by the city in April 2025. The corporation “will immediately begin evaluating the work necessary to correct safety violations, with the goal of reopening it as a public parking ramp by the end of 2026,” reads a prepared statement from the corporation.

Dave Higgins, president of the corporation, said in the statement that “reviving this property fits our mission to take on catalytic projects that strengthen the downtown core and support future investments.”

Both the ramp and the Alliance Bank Center will remain closed to the public for the “foreseeable future,” according to the corporation. Skyway connections to Osborn370 and Treasure Island Center remain open.

The nonprofit, which formed a year ago under the auspices of the Downtown Alliance, plans a public engagement process to examine key wants and needs downtown and inform a long-term improvement strategy.

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James Watson, co-discoverer of the double-helix shape of DNA, has died at age 97

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James D. Watson, whose co-discovery of the twisted-ladder structure of DNA in 1953 helped light the long fuse on a revolution in medicine, crimefighting, genealogy and ethics, has died, according to his former research lab. He was 97.

The breakthrough — made when the brash, Chicago-born Watson was just 24 — turned him into a hallowed figure in the world of science for decades. But near the end of his life, he faced condemnation and professional censure for offensive remarks, including saying Black people are less intelligent than white people.

Watson shared a 1962 Nobel Prize with Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins for discovering that deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA, is a double helix, consisting of two strands that coil around each other to create what resembles a long, gently twisting ladder.

That realization was a breakthrough. It instantly suggested how hereditary information is stored and how cells duplicate their DNA when they divide. The duplication begins with the two strands of DNA pulling apart like a zipper.

Even among non-scientists, the double helix would become an instantly recognized symbol of science, showing up in such places as the work of Salvador Dali and a British postage stamp.

The discovery helped open the door to more recent developments such as tinkering with the genetic makeup of living things, treating disease by inserting genes into patients, identifying human remains and criminal suspects from DNA samples and tracing family trees. But it has also raised a host of ethical questions, such as whether we should be altering the body’s blueprint for cosmetic reasons or in a way that is transmitted to a person’s offspring.

“Francis Crick and I made the discovery of the century, that was pretty clear,” Watson once said. He later wrote: “There was no way we could have foreseen the explosive impact of the double helix on science and society.”

Two men injured in separate shootings in St. Paul

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Two men were injured in shootings reported about 15 minutes apart, in separate parts of St. Paul Friday morning.

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Preliminary information indicates the shootings are unrelated, and police are investigating the circumstances of both, said police spokeswoman Alyssa Arcand. No one was under arrest in either case as of early Friday afternoon.

Officers were called to a shooting in Payne-Phalen just before 10:45 a.m. They found a man in the 800 block of Forest Street who’d been shot in the leg and he was taken to the hospital.

Then, just before 11 a.m., a man arrived at Regions Hospital with a gunshot wound to his ankle. He said he’d been shot near Marion Street and Aurora Avenue in the Summit-University area.

Both men sustained non-life threatening injuries, Arcand said.

Opinion: Aging in Place Shouldn’t Cost Everything You’ve Worked For

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“Thousands of middle-income older adults are caught in between—too poor to pay privately [for home care], too ‘wealthy’ to qualify for help. Now, New York has a chance to fix part of that gap.”

A senior center in Brooklyn. (Adi Talwar/City Limits)

Every day at Encore Community Services in Midtown Manhattan, I meet older New Yorkers who worked their whole lives and now face an impossible choice. They can drain their savings to pay for home care, or try to live without the help they need to stay safe at home.

Medicaid, the public insurance program for people with very low incomes, will pay for long-term home care. But Medicare, which nearly all older adults rely on after 65, will not. In New York, thousands of middle-income older adults are caught in between—too poor to pay privately, too “wealthy” to qualify for help.

Now, New York has a chance to fix part of that gap. New York State Senate Bill S7077, which passed the Legislature this year and awaits Gov. Kathy Hochul’s signature, would remove the client fees for the state’s Expanded In-Home Services for the Elderly Program, or EISEP.

The program provides home care for people who don’t qualify for Medicaid. If signed, the bill would make those services free for thousands of older adults who currently pay out of pocket. This would only cover 20 hours of home care per week. But for many of my clients, that difference would decide whether they can stay home or not. 

Last month, I visited an elderly former nursing home worker for an assessment. She lives alone and suffers from several chronic illnesses that make it nearly impossible to manage basic daily tasks like cleaning, laundry, or shopping. Some days, the pain is so severe she can’t get out of bed.

She earns just above the Medicaid income limit, so she doesn’t qualify for assistance, and the cost of private home care is far beyond reach. When we calculated her fee for New York’s EISEP home-care program, it came to more than $1,200 a month—a full third of her income. Her response was immediate: “I can’t afford that.” 

Other clients try what’s called a Medicaid Spend Down. It requires them to pay down their “extra” income each month just to qualify for services—a constant financial drain. Some turn to Pooled Income Trusts, legal arrangements that let them deposit excess income to meet Medicaid rules while using the money for certain expenses. But these trusts are complicated, often require a lawyer, and make it harder for people to access their own funds. With no truly affordable option, too many older adults keep struggling to care for themselves in pain and isolation.

Ending monthly EISEP fees won’t solve everything, but it will finally give these New Yorkers a little breathing room. It says clearly that home care isn’t a luxury; it’s basic support for living with dignity. When people can afford consistent help, they avoid falls, stay healthier, and often delay or prevent nursing-home placement by keeping them in their community. That saves families stress—and it saves taxpayers money.

Recent reporting in The New York Times showed how Medicaid can even come after a person’s home after they die to recover care costs—a policy that’s stripped tens of thousands of families of modest inheritances. It’s another way the current system punishes aging and perpetuates inequality, especially for families who have little wealth to begin with.

But the deeper problem is national. Medicare, the program that covers nearly every older American in need of this support, still excludes long-term home care. Unless someone has just left the hospital and needs short-term skilled nursing, Medicare won’t pay for an aide to help with bathing, cooking, or taking medication. Those are the very supports that keep people stable and independent in their own homes.

Because of that gap, families scramble to fill the void. Adult children cut work hours or quit jobs to care for aging parents. Hospitals see more preventable readmissions. Nursing homes fill with people who could have remained at home if a few hours of weekly help were covered. The policy is outdated, and it’s costing us all more in the long run.

We’ve modernized Medicare before—adding prescription coverage, preventive screenings, even telehealth during the pandemic. Expanding it to include home care is the next logical step. It would cost money, yes, but we already spend billions cleaning up the consequences of not doing so. A modest home-care benefit would be both compassionate and cost-effective.

At Encore, I see the difference every day when care works. A client regains strength after a fall. A widow cooks her own meal again. A man stays in the apartment he’s called home for 40 years. These small victories are what dignity looks like.

Gov. Hochul should sign S7077 and make New York a model for the nation. Then, Congress should follow that lead and bring Medicare into the modern age. Aging in place shouldn’t depend on your income or your ZIP code. It should be a right we guarantee to every older adult. 

Matthew Welch is a financial caseworker at Encore Community Services, a non-profit organization in New York City that provides services for older adults. His work empowers older adults to live financially independent and healthy lives. 

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