Duluth hunter charged with illegally shooting moose said he mistook it for a deer

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VIRGINIA — A Duluth hunter has been charged with illegally taking a moose, which he told officers he mistook for a deer.

The Duluth man faces a gross misdemeanor charge after allegedly shooting the animal on Nov. 8, the opening day of the firearms deer season, just north of Cotton.

Minnesota has not had a moose season since 2012, as the once-thriving population began a rapid decline about 20 years ago.

The incident was reported to the Department of Natural Resources shortly after 9 a.m., according to a criminal complaint. Conservation officers Shane Zavodnik and Jake Peterson responded and met the man and his hunting party at their camp in the Melrude area.

The man allegedly said he was in his stand when he saw what he believed to be deer antlers and shot the animal. He fired again, causing it to fall.

Officers learned he had sent a message to another member of his group, stating: “I f—ed up and shot a moose.”

The hunter said his stand faces east and that the trees and glare from the sun made it difficult to see, but he thought he was shooting at a six-point white-tailed deer. The moose was found approximately 110 yards away from the stand.

Both officers reported that the man’s eyes were “bloodshot and watery” and that he smelled of alcohol. He allegedly acknowledged drinking beer the previous night, and a preliminary breath test showed a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.10, which is higher than the legal limit for driving.

The officers seized the man’s rifle, and the moose was turned over to the 1854 Treaty Authority, which manages off-reservation tribal hunting rights in Northeastern Minnesota.

State law sets restitution for the illegal taking of a moose at $1,000. The charge itself carries a fine of up to $3,000; jail time is not typically imposed for hunting violations, and the man does not appear to have any criminal history.

He was issued a summons to appear in State District Court in Virginia on Feb. 20.

A DNR estimate this year placed the state’s moose population at 4,040 — a figure that has remained relatively stable for the past decade, but a far cry from the 8,840 estimated in 2006.

The figure plummeted to just 2,760 in 2013, which prompted the DNR and area tribes to suspend the hunt. The three Ojibwe bands in the treaty area resumed a limited harvest in 2016.

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Clive Crook: An old-fashioned cure for fading trust in government

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Across much of the industrial world, trust in government is low and declining. Why is this happening and why, exactly, does it matter?

An unusually thorough new study looks at these questions and finds answers that are somewhat unexpected and, in one way, more disturbing than you might have guessed.

The fact of diminished trust is hardly a revelation, least of all in countries such as the U.S., where anti-establishment populists have turned politics upside down and elite expertise has become not just distrusted but disdained.

Last year a survey found that fewer than one in six Americans expect Washington to do the right thing “nearly always” (1%) or “most of the time” (15%).

At the turn of the century, such measures for the U.S. were more than twice as high. Across the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, many other countries (including the UK, the Netherlands, Spain, New Zealand and Chile) have also seen trust decline. But in others (such as Finland, Ireland, Portugal, and Mexico) trust has increased. Levels of trust, as opposed to rates of change, also vary a lot. These widely differing patterns make it possible to examine causes.

On the face of it, the collapse of trust seems like a phenomenon of social psychology — a perspective that tends to highlight a confluence of cultural and technological factors. Social media, disinformation and misinformation, echo chambers, epistemic bubbles and whatnot are often taken to be responsible.

This view is mistaken, according to a study by Michael Boskin, Alexander Kleiner and Ian Whiton, all of Stanford University. Their paper adds to a body of research that says straightforward economic factors are what count.

Looking at 34 countries between 2007 and 2023, they find that per-capita gross domestic product, debt, social spending, unemployment, and inflation all have pronounced effects on trust in government. In their analysis, the interactions and trade-offs among these measures largely explain the outcome, leaving non-economic factors to play “only a supporting role.”

Overall, an increase in per capita GDP (in real, after-tax terms) of $1,000 corresponded to a rise in trust of 0.2 percentage points. The effect of higher social spending was even more pronounced: An increase of $1,000 per capita is associated with a 1.4 percentage-point increase in trust.

Higher inflation and higher unemployment both reduce trust, as you’d expect; each increase of a percentage point reduces trust in government by 1.6 and 1.0 percentage points, respectively. Half a century ago, the economist Arthur Okun coined the “misery index,” the sum of the rates of inflation and unemployment. Evidently, misery means distrust, and inflation is especially likely to induce it.

More important are the trade-offs connecting these various measures. Other things being equal, trust rises when social spending goes up. If higher spending coincides with a period of high unemployment and spare economic capacity, it’s likely to cut joblessness without pushing inflation up.

The net effect, thanks to lower unemployment, would then be an even bigger improvement in trust. But if the spending coincides with full employment and no spare capacity, it will likely drive up inflation – most likely by enough to yield a net reduction in trust. The authors surmise that this is what happened in many countries, especially the U.S., once the recovery from the pandemic was well under way.

One way to summarize the finding is to say that sound macroeconomic management — not the same as “big government” or “small government” — promotes trust, and that the main test of sound macroeconomic policy is low unemployment and (especially) low inflation. But there’s another more unsettling implication: Declining trust will be self-reinforcing if, as seems likely, it makes sound macroeconomic policy more difficult.

A vicious circle of macro mismanagement and declining trust is plausible. Inflation expectations are anchored by the credibility of policymakers’ commitment to keep prices under control. If that credibility erodes, achieving low inflation gets harder.

And this risk isn’t confined to the decisions made by central banks. Fiscal policy is equally implicated. Rising debt arouses distrust in its own right; at a certain point, it also calls into question the government’s preference for low inflation (because higher inflation would reduce the debt in real terms). Higher inflation means less trust; less trust makes higher inflation more likely. Trust in government requires good government; good government requires trust in government.

The good news in this study is that restoring trust might be more straightforward than cultural revolution and/or technological stasis. Plain old sound economic management — with particular stress on keeping inflation tamed — might suffice. The bad news for countries like the U.S., which have seen trust in government fall so precipitously, is that sound economic management is now a lot more difficult than before.

Clive Crook is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist and member of the editorial board covering economics. Previously, he was deputy editor of the Economist and chief Washington commentator for the Financial Times.

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St. Paul’s Minnetronix, now Forj Medical, expanding in Costa Rica

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St. Paul medical device companies Minnetronix Medical and Intricon recently merged to form a new contract design and manufacturing organization — and it’s growing.

The newly-formed Forj Medical will soon open a 53,000-square-foot facility in Costa Rica that will feature manufacturing lines for automated and manual assemblies of components and finished medical devices, according to a company news release.

Intricon, an expert in components, microelectronics and precision molding, was founded in St. Paul in 1977 and has facilities in Arden Hills and Vadnais Heights. Minnetronix, known for manufacturing advanced medical technology, was founded in 1996 and has its facilities on Energy Park Drive in St. Paul. The existing facilities, which were not impacted by the merger, now operate under Forj Medical, a spokesperson for the company said.

“Costa Rica is a key pillar in our global network,” said Jeremy Maniak, CEO of Forj Medical and former Minnetronix CEO, in the release. “By combining deep expertise in system and component design with advanced automation and assembly, we help our original equipment manufacturing customers solve complex challenges, scale production with confidence, and bring innovative technologies to patients faster.”

Located in the Evolution Free Zone in Tacares de Grecia, the manufacturing facility will be the first in Costa Rica dedicated to custom electromagnetic sensors, biosensor devices and microelectronic medical devices built on a globally integrated supply chain, Maniak said in the release.

The Costa Rica facility will also include a large clean room for producing devices such as thoseused for surgical navigation, diabetes, drug delivery, cardiovascular and advanced optics applications.

The company is currently hiring for critical leadership positions with additional openings expected in the coming months.

About the merger

Headquartered in the St. Paul area, Forj Medical officially launched in October with the merging of two St. Paul companies.

“Two leaders in medical device innovation have come together to create something extraordinary for customers,” said Mauricio Arellano,  executive chair of Forj Medical, in October. “With a shared commitment to quality and innovation, Forj Medical is well positioned to support our customers and accelerate breakthroughs in patient care.”

Forj Medical operates across six facilities in the United States, Indonesia, Singapore and Costa Rica.

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Oakdale: Open houses planned for police expansion, city hall remodel project

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Oakdale residents will have a chance to learn more about an upcoming City Hall remodel and police station expansion during two open houses next week.

Among the planned improvements: a new public entrance to City Hall from 15th Street North with a new public parking lot. Residents will be able to access all city services on the building’s first floor, including the police department.

Additionally, the new design provides secured parking and entrance to the facility for city staff.

Both projects are being funded by the local sales tax. Voters in November 2022 approved the local sales tax for a remodeled and expanded police facility; two years later, voters approved a five-year extension to the local sales tax to support the project.

Members of the design team will be available to answer questions and share information about the project plans and timeline at events on Monday and Tuesday night.

A virtual open house will be held via Zoom from 6-7 p.m. Monday; the Zoom link will be available prior to the Open House date on the project’s webpage.

An in-person open house will be 5-6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Oakdale City Hall, 1584 Hadley Ave. N.

For more information, visit oakdalemn.gov/Remodeled-Police-and-City-Hall.

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