Justice Bus makes legal help more accessible in Minnesota

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ST. CLOUD, Minn. — Chris Klimpel knew she wanted to help people.

She’d previously worked as a teacher and in marketing before becoming a paralegal and joining Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid’s St. Cloud office in 2020. Klimpel said she didn’t have enough of an affinity for math and science to be a nurse, so she figured she could wade through pages of legal documents and footnotes to help people get the assistance they need.

Klimpel works with Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid’s teams that help seniors and others with housing issues. The U.S. Constitution guarantees the right to an attorney only in criminal cases, not civil cases such as divorce and eviction.

“If your landlord files an eviction action against you, and you go to court and they have an attorney and you can’t afford one — who’s going to win?” she said. “Low-income and people in need … are at a tremendous disadvantage because our world does not guarantee them an attorney.”

Klimpel and fellow paralegal Pam Manthei work to increase access to legal aid by driving around a 14-county radius in a Justice Bus, a mobile office used for consultations.

Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid is a nonprofit law firm that provides legal assistance to people with low incomes, seniors, people with disabilities, and others who need help. It has offices in Minneapolis, St. Cloud and Willmar. The affiliated Minnesota Disability Law Center has two additional offices in Duluth and Mankato, with an outreach coordinator in the Crookston area.

Among those offices, the nonprofit has four Justice Buses.

Since 2021, the buses have been used to connect with people who might not be able to make it to a Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid office. Manthei said they have worked with surrounding counties to identify good locations to visit.

“We’ve gone to a lot of senior centers and food shelves,” said Manthei, who works with seniors on addressing issues with things such as Medicaid and Social Security benefits. “I’ve even been asked to drive through a few apartment complexes so residents can get our information and know where to go for help.”

The bus and Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid staff have also made stops at county fairs and other community events to raise awareness, said Manthei, who has worked at the nonprofit law firm for 30 years.

The Justice Bus, a blue Sprinter van, is covered with information about how to contact Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid. Inside, the van is climate-controlled and has Wi-Fi, a computer, a printer, and pretty much anything else needed for it to be a fully functional office, Klimpel said. It also has a wheelchair lift to increase accessibility.

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It took a decade for the buses to become a reality, thanks in part to former Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid Deputy Director Ann Cofell, Manthei said. It was made possible with the help of the Minnesota Legal Services Coalition.

“It was her dream to do that,” Manthei said of Cofell. “I know she invested. It was probably almost a decade’s worth of persistent, gentle, effective advocacy to get a tool so that we could get the word out and reach people where they need to be.”

As paralegals, Klimpel and Manthei meet with clients to discuss their legal questions, help them fill out paperwork, and connect them with a Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid lawyer who can assist them.

While Klimpel and Manthei cannot give out legal advice, their goal is to help make the process as easy as possible and ensure clients are able to get the support they need.

They help people who are not legally equipped to handle dire, time-sensitive issues, such as a notice to vacate an apartment.

“Legal aid is kind of like the legal emergency room, so if you walk into the emergency room with a broken leg, they’re going to see you and they’re going to set your broken leg,” Klimpel said. “They may not be able to take care of all the other things that you have going on … but they’ll be able to help because nobody expects you to know how to set your own broken leg.”

Live: Day 2 of the Minnesota Yacht Club music festival draws tens of thousands to Harriet Island

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After an opening day that felt electric despite severe weather chopping off the last 20 minutes of headliner Hozier’s set, this year’s Minnesota Yacht Club music festival returned for a sunnier second day Saturday.

Ticket sales had apparently been slower for Saturday — this was the only day out of the festival’s three days for which single-day general admission tickets were not sold out — but you wouldn’t know it: By late afternoon, Harriet Island Regional Park in St. Paul felt just as packed, if not more so, than it did Friday.

And an important update for fans of not only Weezer and Fall Out Boy but also public transportation: Metro Transit, which had initially said Green Line light-rail construction would last throughout the festival weekend, announced Saturday morning that they’d finished early and trains were back up and running.

To kick off the day after doors opened at 12:30, local opening acts Laamar and Raffaella commanded sizable and particularly engaged audiences. Up next, to a slightly more modest but still pumped-up crowd, Jake Clemons — who now fills his late uncle Clarence Clemons’ former role as the saxophonist for Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band — showed off his killer sax chops and solo music with a hard-rock edge.

The day really hit its stride when California alt-rockers Silversun Pickups erupted onstage — and yes, they were loud, but not just loud. Sound mixing has been really skillfully done throughout the entire festival but especially so here, balancing singer Brian Aubert against the band’s powerful guitar work and Nikki Monninger’s show-stealing bass.

Pitch hitting for a sick vocalist and guitarist Justin Pierre, Fall Out Boy lead singer Patrick Stump, joins Motion City Soundtrack on the Crows Nest Stage at the Minnesota Yacht Club Festival at Harriet Island in St. Paul on Saturday July 19, 2025.(John Autey / Pioneer Press)

And despite committing the cardinal sin of St. Paul concert openings — “Hello, Minneapolis!” — especially as a local band that should know better, Motion City Soundtrack delivered one of the day’s most fun sets. Frontman Justin Pierre had to call out sick, and it was a bummer to miss seeing him at the band’s first local gig in over a year and a half, but the show went on thanks to a series of “special guest” lead singers.

The first of which was none other than Patrick Stump, lead singer of today’s final headlining band Fall Out Boy, who has also provided backing vocals for Motion City Soundtrack in the past and is set to be featured on a track on the band’s forthcoming record “The Same Old Wasted Wonderful World,” their first release in a decade.

Stump is a longtime Motion City Soundtrack fan, he said onstage — a feeling that’s very much mutual, as MCS guitarist Joshua Cain told the Pioneer Press this week — and he absolutely crushed it on their stage. After a couple songs, the group brought out Minnesota singer-songwriter Ber for two songs and then local band Gully Boys’ Nadi McGill and Kathy Callahan for a song each before returning to Stump. He closed the set delivering some of MCS’s biggest hits like “Everything Is Alright” and “The Future Freaks Me Out” with contagious energy and slightly punkier vocals.

Jam rock stalwarts OAR and Cory Wong paved the way for the night’s headlining trio, and though food lines did get longer during Wong’s dinnertime set, it was cool to see crowds still go wild for the local guitar pro’s funk-jazz sound amid an otherwise rock-heavy lineup.

Headliners Weezer, Remi Wolf and Fall Out Boy are up next.

(This article will be updated.)

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‘Where’s Royce?’: Twins third baseman Royce Lewis searching for answers

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DENVER — Royce Lewis can tell something is different, even though his swing feels good to him. When he watches himself on film, when he looks back on his at-bats, he notices something looks off.

His thoughts range from: “That’s not Royce,” to “I want it to be Royce,” to ‘Where’s Royce?’”

The production from Lewis that the Twins have become accustomed to getting hasn’t been there this season, and Lewis expressed a desire for a “reset” before Saturday’s game. Lewis, who was not in the starting lineup on Saturday, entered the day hitting .211 with just two home runs on the season. He has a negative bWAR (wins above replacement per Baseball Reference) and his numbers have dipped from his career averages across the board.

“To me, in my head, it feels the same,” he said of his swing. “It’s like, until you look at yourself in the mirror, you’re like ‘I’m the best dressed. I look good,’” Lewis said. “Then you look at yourself and ‘Maybe I don’t look good in yellow.’ I’m watching video and I thought it looked good, but it does look a little different.”

His swing, he said, doesn’t look the same as it did even last year. His body is compensating for something, he believes, and after dealing with two hamstring strains this year — including a very significant one that he suffered in spring training — he feels injuries have taken more of a toll on his body than he once realized.

Perhaps, the 26-year-old said, it’s because he’s “starting to get older.”

Hitting coach Matt Borgschulte said Lewis was continuing to put in the work to get back where he needed to be and said he believed the third baseman was getting closer “by the day.”

But the lack of results, it seems, have gotten into his head. In Friday’s game, Lewis scorched a lineout at 104.3 mph off the bat at second baseman Ryan Ritter. In the past, he said he’s done a good job of walking away from something like that, thinking “It’s part of the process, part of the game.”

Now, his perspective has shifted.

“I’ve become more results-oriented because of how we run things here personally. It’s been harder for me mentally,” Lewis said. “This year, it seems like if I don’t — or anybody in general — (they’re) quick to pull the trigger on you. I’m trying to do my best to get some balls to fall and when that doesn’t happen, you’re just like (out of luck).”

But Lewis, despite dealing with the frustrations of this season, still projected optimism for the remaining two and a half months of the season and called this year a “significant jump … in terms of growth and wisdom.”

“I’m trying to figure it out,” Lewis said. “Hopefully soon it looks like the Royce of old.”

Reinforcements arrive

The Twins welcomed Zebby Matthews back from the injured list on Saturday, the first of a group they hope can impact them down the stretch.

Bailey Ober (hip) threw four scoreless innings on a rehab assignment at Triple-A on Friday night and the Twins have not yet detailed the next steps for him. Joining him with the Saints was Luke Keaschall (arm), who is expected to have a lengthy rehab assignment as he comes back from a fractured forearm. And at some point, the Twins anticipate getting Pablo López (shoulder) back, as well.

“You definitely want to just keep getting guys healthy, keep getting guys back. You’re going to be better for it ultimately,” Baldelli said. “There could be some hard decisions that come along with it. That’s part of the game so we just want to keep, on the medical side, on the health side, just keep getting stronger and stronger and keep giving us options.”

Briefly

Joe Ryan will make his first start of the second half of the season on Sunday at Coors Field. Ryan, who last pitched Tuesday in the All-Star Game, has a 2.72 ERA on the season. … Travis Adams was optioned to Triple-A to make room on the roster for Matthews.

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Rondo royalty and ‘hometown hero’ Dave Winfield honored in St. Paul

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Baseball hall of famer Dave Winfield, center, smiles during his legacy celebration at Toni Stone Stadium in St. Paul on Saturday, July 19, 2025. (Bennett Moger / Pioneer Press)

Dozens of baseball fans and community members flocked to Toni Stone Field on Saturday to honor baseball great Dave Winfield, the former St. Paul playground legend who became a major league hall of famer.

During a ceremony recognizing Winfield’s athletic and philanthropic successes, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter announced that a statue of Winfield would be placed at the St. Paul baseball field in the spring to remind young athletes of their own potential for greatness.

Baseball hall of famer and St. Paul native Dave Winfield gives a speech during his legacy celebration at Toni Stone Stadium in St. Paul on Saturday, July 19, 2025. (Bennett Moger / Pioneer Press)

“St. Paul, all of you mean a great deal to me,” Dave Winfield said. “And I’m totally honored that you would think of putting up some permanent recognition to keep that legacy alive, to motivate other people after me and tell them, ‘Yeah, you can do it, too. Yeah, you come from St. Paul, Minnesota.’ It’s not where you’re from, it’s where you’re going. And to have that permanent statue and legacy … it’s one of the greatest honors of my life.”

A star pitcher and basketball player at the University of Minnesota, Winfield became one of baseball’s great right fielders over a 22-year career playing for San Diego, the New York Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays, Twins and, briefly, Cleveland. He was an all-star 12 times, and won seven Gold Glove Awards.

In addition to baseball’s Hall of Fame (2001), Winfield is a member of the Gophers and Central High School halls. He has written several books and articles on baseball, and his “Ask Dave” column ran in the Pioneer Press from 1993-94.

“This is a very powerful day,” said Anika Bowie, city council member representing Ward 1 in St. Paul. “And this neighborhood that raised legends continues to make history.”

The Winfield family, which includes Dave’s brother, Steve — a fixture in St. Paul amateur athletics as a player, coach and game official — is “Rondo Royalty,” Bowie said. “They represent the best of us. Rooted, resilient, and relentless in their beliefs, in our young people, in our families, and in investing in what has invested in us.”

“Their roots run deep here and their values reflect everything that his neighbors stands for — perseverance, leadership and love for a community,” she said. “They showed us what’s possible when talent meets opportunity and when family and neighborhoods walk beside you every step of that way.”

Winfield is more than just a “baseball icon,” she said. “He’s a Rondo kid … who turned grit into greatness, a young boy who sharpened his skills on the field and was lifted up by a community that believed in him. And now he gives back to that same community 10 times over.”

Along with the installation of the statue, Carter announced that the Toni Stone baseball field would be “renewed” and that a Hall of Fame plaza was going to be constructed at the location to honor Winfield and the other St. Paul hall of famers: Paul Molitor, Jack Morris and Joe Mauer. All four grew up at different times, but within miles of one another in the city.

Baseball hall of famers Dave Winfield, left, and Joe Mauer, right, congratulate each other during the Dave Winfield Legacy Celebration at Toni Stone Stadium in St. Paul on Saturday, July 19, 2025. A statue of each of them, in addition to two other St. Paul baseball legends, will be installed in the Dunning Sports Complex to celebrate the path they have paved for St. Paul baseball. (Bennett Moger / Pioneer Press)

“We’re in the presence of royalty today,” Carter noted, acknowledging the other recognizable members of the crowd, such as Mauer, longtime baseball coach Bill Peterson and former Vikings receiver — and King Boreas — Leo Lewis.

Growing up, Carter said, he and his friends said they knew that Winfield and Peterson were from their community and he remembered the day Winfield swung the bat and made his 3,000th hit.

“And that changes our perspective of where we can go from these spaces,” Carter said, noting that out of some 20,000 people who have played Major League Baseball, only 33 have had accumulated as many as 3,000 hits, including Molitor. “So, when we say that Dave Winfield is literally one of the best to ever do it, that is not hyperbole at all. That is just statistical facts.

“And the only thing better than coming from this community and going on to do great things is coming back to the community to do great things.”

From the early stages of his baseball career, Winfield has been invested in the community and neighborhood.

“They say, ‘Don’t forget where you came from,’ and we’re here to honor and celebrate someone who literally never forgot where he came from,” Carter said.

St. Paul Parks and Recreation Director Andy Rodriguez called Winfield a “hometown hero who represents the heart, soul and strength of” St. Paul.

“Baseball is woven into the history of St. Paul. It’s more than a game here. It’s part of our identity,” Rodriguez added. “St. Paul has always been a place where young people have found themselves through sports and recreation, and found community through teams. And no one embodies that story more than Dave Winfield.”

Winfield retired with 3,110 hits, the 3,000th hit as a member of the hometown Twins in 1993. The year before, he won the World Series with the Blue Jays.

“Even more inspiring is what he’s done beyond the field,” Rodriguez said. “He’s never forgotten where he came from. He’s invested in youth, in community, and in opportunity and in building programs that have lifted up thousands of young people across the country and especially here at home.”

In St. Paul, Rodriguez noted, all athletic programs for children are free “because we believe every kid deserves the chance to play, deserves the chance to grow and belong.”

Dave St. Peter, longtime president of the Minnesota Twins now working with them as a consultant, said that while Winfield was a “unique player,” his athletic prowess is only part of his legacy.

“Dave was active in the community before it was in vogue for players to be active in the community,” he said. “The Winfield Foundation had been established many, many years before he ever showed up in a Twins uniform. And in my role at the time, it was a blessing to (tell other players) … ‘Dave is the model, guys.’”

“I had a really wonderful blessed career with the Twins, and I got to do a lot of really cool things,” St. Peter said, “But one of the things I’m most proud of is working with Dave Winfield and championing his community activities.”

Carter said he went to college on a Winfield scholarship and that he is the parent of a student who was a scholarship recipient.

Dave Winfield, right, hugs his brother Steve Winfield, left, before giving his speech during the Dave Winfield Legacy Celebration at Toni Stone Stadium in St. Paul on Saturday, July 19, 2025. (Bennett Moger / Pioneer Press)

Steve Winfield also spoke at the ceremony, saying that when he and his brother were growing up, raised by a single mom without much money, they always tried to find an extra can of food or something to help when a new member of their baseball team showed up and didn’t have “much of anything.”

And his brother noted, Winfield went on to help others as one of the first professional athletes to start a foundation.

“Now, just about all the athletes get a contract and say, ‘OK, I’ll do this, I’ll do that,’” he said. “But David was doing it before it was a popular thing to do, so I think that’s a thing I’m most proud of.”

Playing sports is about more than just the sport, Carter said.

“You learn how to connect with teammates. You learn how to work hard through struggle. You learn how to take and receive coaching. You build relationships with your teammates, you build relationships with adults who care about you,” he said.

Winfield said he and older brother Steve were “very fortunate” to grow up in a community where sports and the park and recreation were important to the community. They loved baseball from a young age.

“We would play and we didn’t need nine guys and a coach and time for practice,” he said. “We’d get a rubber ball, a tennis ball — any kind of ball — and play off the steps, off the back of the church, in the street, in the alleys, anywhere. Baseball just really took ahold of us.”

Steve would fall asleep at night dreaming of making the best catch ever, Winfield said, while he would fall asleep thinking about how hard he wanted to hit a baseball.

“I wanted to hit the ball so hard that a guy would reach out and the ball would already be past him,” he said.

In a special article he wrote for the Pioneer Press on the occasion of Target Field hosting the All-Star Game in 2014, Winfield said he began playing baseball at age 8, and knew by the age of 12 that he wanted to play professionally.

“The skills and lessons I learned in St. Paul were the foundation of a career I could barely imagine as a youth,” he wrote.

More than anything, Winfield said Saturday, he wanted to thank “all the teachers, the coaching, the community members who poured something into me to help make me who I am.”

He said he had no idea that the future mayor of St. Paul would benefit from his foundation. “And all the outstanding things he’s done. I didn’t know. But it was always about giving back. It was just a natural thing for me.”

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