St. Paul: Loans offered for residents impacted by Skyline Tower fire

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In late October, a fire at the Skyline Tower housing complex on St. Anthony Avenue forced a quick evacuation of all 25 floors, temporarily displacing more than 770 residents while activating sprinklers on multiple levels.

Most, but not all, residents have been able to return to their apartments, but multiple levels suffered fire, smoke or severe water damage. To assist residents, the U.S. Small Business Administration is offering low-interest disaster loan assistance, as well as help with applications, from a temporary office that opened on University Avenue in late December.

The disaster loan outreach center, located within the Sanneh Foundation at 1276 University Ave W., is closed through Sunday, and resume normal business hours on Monday. It closes permanently on Jan. 10.

The SBA issued a disaster declaration in response to a request received from Gov. Tim Walz on Dec. 19.

“I do not know the total amount of damages this caused in total dollar loss, but the amount and extended displacement of residents in addition to services provided would be substantial,” said St. Paul Deputy Fire Chief Jamie Smith, in a recent email.

Tenants are eligible to apply for low-interest personal property loans of up to $100,000 to replace or repair uninsured and underinsured items such as clothing, rugs, furniture and appliances.

Beyond residents who were immediately displaced, any Minnesota business, private nonprofit or resident who can show they were financially affected by the Skyline Tower fire may apply for disaster relief in the form of both physical damage loans, for disaster-damaged assets and real estate, and Economic Injury Disaster Loans known as EIDLs. The disaster declaration covers Ramsey County and Anoka, Dakota, Hennepin and Washington counties.

For those with insurance, disaster loans may cover the gap between an insurance settlement and what is needed to fully recover. The SBA uses loss verifiers to review the extent of damages.

“We want to aid the renters who were impacted by the fire directly … (but) the fire may have caused nearby small businesses to experience a drop in business and economic loss,” said Jackson Collier, a public affairs specialist with the SBA, in an interview.

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The loans, issued directly from the U.S. Treasury, come with interest rates as low as 3% and additional benefits, such as no payments or accrued interest for the first year, and loan terms of up to 30 years. Even after the temporary disaster relief center closes on Jan. 10, applications for physical damage loans will be accepted online through Feb. 20, and for economic injury loans through Sept. 22, at SBA.gov.

The fire, which started on the 12th floor, activated the building’s fire protection sprinklers on the 12th, 13th and 14th floors, and the water caused a power outage, according to the St. Paul Fire Department. The building’s elevators, fire suppression system, heat and water supply went out, but were later repaired. Most residents who have not already returned are expected to be able to move back into their units in time.

Wisconsin-River Falls football: How a coach’s faith helped Kaleb Blaha become D3’s best

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There were days at practice during his freshman year at Winona State in which Kaleb Blaha wouldn’t touch the ball once.

Everyone has their role, but the experience was a stark contrast from how Blaha grew up playing football. It wasn’t how he envisioned himself finishing out his playing days.

Kaleb Blaha smiles as he’s surrounded by his teammates during the Falcons’ 58-7 win over Chapman in an NCAA Division-III second-round playoff game in River Falls, Wis. on Nov. 29, 2025. (Pat Deninger / Wisconsin-River Falls)

“I just wanted to be a big part of the team,” Blaha said. “And I wanted to impact a team as much as I could.”

He wanted to play quarterback.

That’s the position at which Blaha starred for Fridley High School. In the fall of 2019, the senior signal caller threw for 1,503 yards and 21 touchdowns while rushing for an additional 821 yards and 21 scores, while leading the Tigers to a 10-1 record and a state tournament appearance.

Blaha was one of the best quarterbacks in the state, yet college programs couldn’t envision a future for him at the position.

“Most of my offers, and coaches that were talking to me, wanted me to play receiver or (defensive back),” he said.

With one glaring exception: Matt Walker.

The Wisconsin-River Falls football coach has watched thousands of hours of recruiting tapes featuring the best high school plays from prospective collegiate players, and Blaha’s clips hit him like a freight train.

“Oh my God,” Walker thought. “This kid, he’s the real deal.”

Walker didn’t just see a quarterback, he saw a superstar.

“I really thought he was a generational talent. Even when he was a little rawer and not this polished, I thought he could do things that other people couldn’t do,” Walker said. “I thought it was really special how athletic he was and he threw it good enough at the time to be dangerous at quarterback.”

Walker was the only person to go into Blaha’s Coon Rapids home for what the coach called a “hardcore” recruiting effort.

“I thought we had him,” he said.

But Winona State entered the fold late, and the Warriors’ Division II offer came with scholarship money. In the end, Blaha couldn’t turn down the opportunity to play the highest level of college football at which he was offered to compete, even if it was as a receiver.

Still, Walker’s efforts didn’t go unnoticed.

“I just saw how bad he wanted me,” Blaha said.

And a year later, when Blaha decided to leave Winona State, he immediately knew his next destination.

“I was going to come here,” Blaha said of River Falls. “I’m going to play for him.”

The unification of Blaha and Walker has led to one of the best marriages of quarterback and coach. In his fourth year as the Falcons’ starting quarterback, Blaha is a finalist and frontrunner for the Gagliardi Trophy awarded to the best player in Division-III football, and Wisconsin-River Falls is in the Stagg Bowl for the first time in program history.

The Falcons will meet North Central in the NCAA Division III title game at 7 p.m. Sunday in Canton, Ohio, largely thanks to Blaha’s prolific production.

“He’s the best player I’ve ever coached,” Walker said. “I’ve never been around one like him, and I’ve been around some good ones. … He’s got something about him. People don’t have the skillset he has, and then to be as smart as he is and to get the ball out and process as fast as he does, pretty special stuff.”

Of course, Blaha had plenty of help along the way, much of it coming from the coach who believed in him most.

“He’s made me who I am today,” Blaha said.

‘He believed’

Blaha transferred to River Falls in 2021 and served in a reserve role that fall. By 2022, he was the Falcons’ starter.

That season, he threw for 2,488 yards and 21 scores, with 1,000 yards and 14 more touchdowns on the ground. “Video game numbers,” Walker noted. The Falcons went 7-4, with all four losses coming by seven or fewer points to St. John’s, Wisconsin-Platteville, Wisconsin-Whitewater and Wisconsin-La Crosse. River Falls missed the playoffs, but went to, and won, the Isthmus Bowl.

Walker said the moment Blaha took the field, he was immediately one of the “freakiest players in the nation.”

Yet when the quarterback returned home over winter break following the season, he couldn’t shake the feeling that his performance wasn’t good enough. “We won a decent amount of games, but I wasn’t playing as good as I thought I could have,” Blaha said. “I was having moments (thinking), ‘This isn’t for me.’”

He messaged Walker to inform the coach that he didn’t want to play anymore.

“Kaleb has ridiculous expectations for himself,” Walker said. “He didn’t think it was good enough and that maybe he wasn’t good enough to be what we wanted him to be.”

Walker called Blaha and told him to come to his office. He told Blaha the quarterback was “completely off” on his self evaluation. He told Blaha that as the Falcons continued to tailor their offense more and more to the quarterback’s skill set, “it could become something very unique.” He told Blaha the quarterback could be the Player of the Year in the conference and the best player in the country.

He convinced Blaha to stay.

“Looking back on that, it’s crazy to think about,” Blaha said. “I didn’t believe in myself and I wanted to be done. I kind of was ready to be done with football and school and whatever, and Walk saw something in me that I didn’t see in myself. And he convinced me to keep going and he kind of made this all come true, in a way. He said that we could go play in the biggest game, in the national championship. He said that we could make it all the way.

“And I believed him, because of how much he believed.”

Lottery ticket

“What are you doing?”

It’s a frequent thought in the mind of Falcons linebacker Noah Nusbaum as he watches Blaha from the sidelines. The quarterback frequently extends plays with his legs while looking for an open receiver in what quickly develops into playground-style football.

“He’s running around back there and it’s like, ‘Oh God, Blaha,’ ” Nusbaum said. “But then he just does some crazy thing, and that’s just normal here.”

Frankly, Nusbaum thinks it’s weird that every team’s quarterback isn’t firing a dart on one play while running over defenders and flipping into the end zone on the next.

Generational.

This season, Blaha has run for another 1,090 yards and 16 touchdowns, But the major improvement has come through the air. The senior has thrown for 4,680 yards — nearly 900 more than the next leading passer in Division-III football — and 40 scores while leading the best offense in football.

“It’s kind of playing the game in a different way than I haven’t really played before,” Blaha said of his point guard-type role in the passing offense. “It’s very fulfilling, it’s very fun. I like getting the ball to everyone else and watch them work, too. It’s definitely something that I’m not used to, but it’s another reason that I love this game of football.”

Walker knew this year’s team had the talent to compete at a high level, but the ceiling soared to new heights when Blaha made the decision to return. The 2024 campaign was set to be the senior’s last, but a pair of hamstring injuries wiped out much of his fall.

After conversations with Walker, Blaha decided to take a medical redshirt, pushing back graduation and his prospective teaching career by a year.

“It’s like, ‘Oh my God, here’s the lottery ticket you never win,’ ” Walker said. “You’ve got the best player in the country back on a team you knew was going to be really good.”

There was one primary reason for Blaha’s return: to take the program where it’d never been before.

“I swear to you, when he said, ‘I’m coming back’ … he’s like, ‘I just care about winning it all. I just want to win a national championship.’ ” Walker said. “He honestly said that, because he’s such a good kid and he’s so humble and it’s all about the team for him. He almost gets embarrassed about this ridiculous line of accolades that he’s starting to collect now. He’d be the first to tell you, yeah, he’s proud of them, but he wants to win it all.

“That was the mission for this football team.”

Relationship is ‘everything’

With the season hanging in the balance, Blaha ripped a pass into a tight, cover-two window between the cornerback and safety to a streaking Blake Rohrer — a Woodbury product who came to River Falls to play basketball, but was convinced by, who else, Blaha to try out football — who leapt in front of the Johns Hopkins’ safety to snare the third-down completion and run 79 yards to the house to break the tie in the final minute of the NCAA semifinal and give the Falcons a 48-41 victory.

“The game was on the line,” Walker said, “(and) we rip it.”

True to form, Blaha downplayed the throw.

“That play was Blake making a crazy play,” Blaha said. “It shouldn’t have even been caught. And not only did he catch it, but he took it all the way for a touchdown.”

OK, but Blaha certainly did his part. The quarterback threw for 520 yards and five touchdowns while scoring one more on the ground — all after it appeared he would be knocked out of in the first quarter. A hard hit forced Blaha to exit the field while holding his throwing shoulder.

“You could lie and say you weren’t concerned,” Walker said, “(but) we were super concerned.”

For a moment. But the medical staff soon reported it was only a stinger, and Blaha was fine to return to play. The next step was getting the quarterback to believe it.

“It wrecks your brain a little bit,” Blaha said.

The first couple of possessions following his return, Blaha was hesitant to take off with his legs. He was sliding and ducking out of bounds to avoid contact. Walker never yells at the quarterbacks, the position he coaches; the freedom he provides Blaha is one of the things the senior values most. But Blaha wasn’t being himself, and that was a problem.

“He was a little soft after that,” Walker said.

It was something the coach had to address.

“That’s about as much as we’ve gotten into it on the sidelines,” Walker said. “I didn’t chew him out, but we had some passionate talk in the locker room, let’s just say. All good stuff, and he responded correctly.”

Blaha returned to from in the second half, putting his signature athleticism and physicality on full display. The Falcons scored touchdowns on each of their first three possessions of the half and were on their way. Walker was right. When it comes to his quarterback, he always has been.

“He’s very smart football-wise, but I think what matters more and has helped me more is his belief in his players and how much he supports the guys,” Blaha said. “He coaches me, but he also, to a point, let’s me do my own thing out there. If it’s not his way, he’s not going to be upset about it or come down on me. He’s going to let me do my thing. He knows that I’m out there playing.”

A few years after considering quitting the sport, Blaha now envisions taking a swing at the highest level. Given his success and dynamism, it wouldn’t be a surprise if a pro franchise at least wants to get a look at the signal caller in a rookie camp.

Regardless, Sunday will mark the final game of a historic collegiate career, and Blaha is proud of how much his trust and faith in himself as a person and player have grown.

“Just really believing in my dreams and what I thought could happen and what the coaches said could happen,” he said. “This is exactly what I came back for. Why I kept playing, why I kept trying. I don’t think I fully understand what’s happening now, but I know it’s been one heck of a journey, and I couldn’t be more grateful for it.”

Or the man who made it reality.

“He definitely helped me become the player I am today,” Blaha said of Walker. “Yeah, our relationship is everything to me.”

A grandmother and her grandson burn to death in a Gaza tent; Angelina Jolie visits Rafah crossing

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By WAFAA SHURAFA

DEIR AL BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — A grandmother and her 5-year-old grandson burned to death in Gaza when their tent caught fire, as thousands of Palestinians battle harrowing winter conditions in flimsy makeshift housing and the humanitarian crisis persists.

The nylon tent in Yarmouk caught fire Thursday night from cooking, a neighbor said.

As 2026 begins, the shaky 12-week-old ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has largely ended large-scale Israeli bombardment of Gaza. But Palestinians are still being killed by Israeli fire, especially along the so-called Yellow Line that delineates areas under Israeli control, and the humanitarian crisis is compounded by frequent winter rains and colder temperatures.

On Friday, American actor and film producer Angelina Jolie visited the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip. The only crossing between the territory and a country other than Israel, it remains closed despite Palestinian requests to reopen it to people and aid.

Wintry weather hits tent cities

Over past weeks, cold winter rains have repeatedly lashed the sprawling tent cities, causing flooding, turning Gaza’s dirt roads into mud and causing buildings damaged in Israeli bombardment to collapse. UNICEF says at least six children have now died of weather-related causes, including a 4-year-old who died in a building collapse.

At least three children have died of hypothermia, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. High temperatures in December were in the 60s Fahrenheit, but dipped into the mid-40s F on some nights.

Aid groups say not enough shelter materials are getting into Gaza during the truce. Figures recently released by Israel’s military suggest it hasn’t met the ceasefire stipulation of allowing 600 trucks of aid into Gaza a day, though Israel disputes that finding. There is also concern that Israel’s recent suspension of more than three dozen international aid groups from operating in Gaza will make it even harder to get supplies like tents in.

Palestinians have long called for mobile homes and caravans to be allowed in to protect them against living in impractical and worn out tents. In Yarmouk, people live in nylon tents near a garbage dump.

Ashraf al-Suwair said he woke up to the sound of screaming as his neighbors shouted “fire! fire!” He said nylon is like fuel, easy to ignite. “We need a good place that suits the people and the children of Gaza, instead of burning to death,” he said.

Actor visits Rafah crossing

Jolie met with members of the Red Crescent on the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing and then visited a hospital in the nearby city of Arish to speak with Palestinian patients on Friday, according to Egyptian officials.

Reopening the crossing, which would allow Palestinians to leave Gaza — especially the ill and wounded who could get specialized care unavailable in the territory — has been contentious. Israel has said that it will only allow Palestinians to exit Gaza, not enter, until fighters in Gaza return all the hostages they took in the attack on Oct. 7, 2023, which triggered the war. The remains of one hostage are still in Gaza.

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In addition, Israel says Palestinians wanting to leave Gaza will have to get Israeli and Egyptian security approval. Egypt, meanwhile, says it wants the crossing immediately opened in both directions, so Palestinians in Egypt can enter Gaza. That’s a position rooted in Egypt’s vehement opposition to Palestinian refugees permanently resettling in the country.

For more than two decades until 2022, Jolie was a special envoy to the U.N. refugee agency. She has continued to advocate for human rights issue and has visited conflict areas, including Ukraine.

Foreign ministers say Gaza isn’t getting the help it needs

On Friday the foreign ministers of Arab and Muslim countries, including Egypt, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, expressed concern about Gaza’s humanitarian situation.

The situation has been “compounded by the continued lack of sufficient humanitarian access, acute shortages of essential life-saving supplies, and the slow pace of the entry of essential materials,” said the joint statement.

Israel has said throughout the war that Hamas was siphoning off aid supplies, an accusation that the United Nations and aid groups have denied. Last month, the World Food Program said that there have been “notable improvements” in food security in Gaza since the ceasefire.

Since the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas began, 416 people have been killed and 1,142 wounded in Gaza, according to the Health Ministry. The overall Palestinian death toll from the war is at least 71,271. The ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between fighters and civilians in its count, is staffed by medical professionals and maintains detailed records viewed as generally reliable by the international community.

The Israel-Hamas war began with the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack in southern Israel that killed about 1,200 people and saw 251 taken hostage.

West Bank raids

Meanwhile, Israel continues operating in the occupied West Bank.

On Friday, the Palestinian Prisoners media office said that Israel carried out numerous raids across the territory, including the major cities of Ramallah and Hebron. Nearly 50 people were detained, following the arrest of at least 50 other Palestinians on Thursday, most of those in the Ramallah area.

Israel’s military said there were arrests made of people “involved in terrorist activity.” Last Friday, a Palestinian attacker rammed his car into a man and then stabbed a young woman in northern Israel on Friday afternoon, killing both, police said. Raids were conducted afterward in the attacker’s West Bank hometown.

The Palestinian Prisoner’s Society says that Israel has arrested 7,000 Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem this year, and 21,000 since the war began. The number arrested from Gaza isn’t made public by Israel.

Find more of AP’s Israel-Hamas coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

Nearly 12,000 apply for Minnesota’s Paid Leave program in first days

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Almost 12,000 Minnesotans have applied for the state’s new paid leave program since applications opened earlier this week, according to the Department of Employment and Economic Development.

The process for bonding leave for new parents began in early December. As of Friday morning 11,883 people have submitted applications, according to DEED. Of those, the state has completed reviews of 6,393 leaves.

The paid leave program was passed by the DFL-controlled Legislature in 2023. It allows employees to take up to 20 weeks off work each year. It’s funded through a payroll tax paid for by workers and employers though initial costs were seeded by $668 million from the historic $18 billion state revenue surplus. Minnesota now joins 12 other states in offering such a program.

For more information on how it works go to twincities.com/2025/10/04/mn-paid-family-medical-leave-program-jan-1-how-will-it-work/.

Critics of the proposal — such as the National Federation of Independent Business and the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce — have worried it will cost much more than initially estimated.

Washington State has seen the costs of its program grow beyond expectations. In September, an actuarial report found the program could face a $346 million deficit by 2029 and a nearly $1 billion deficit by 2030 under the current tax rate limits.

However, Greg Norfleet, the chief architect of the program at DEED, has said he is confident that Minnesota’s system will work as intended. Norfleet developed a similar program for Massachusetts.

Matt Varilek, DEED commissioner, said the initial nearly 12,000 applications shows how popular the program is among Minnesotans. The initial launch was going well, Varilek said in a statement Friday.

“Our website is managing traffic well and our contact center team is prepared to answer questions from Minnesotans who need assistance,” Varilek said. “We’re proud and excited to implement this program for Minnesota.”

Based on projections from an independent actuary, DEED expects about 130,000 approved claims in the first year of the program.

How to apply

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MN paid leave applications open early statewide. Here’s how to apply.

Minnesota workers may apply for paid leave on Wednesday, Dec. 31. Go to paidleave.mn.gov to apply and to learn more about eligibility and benefits.

To call the paid leave contact center dial (651) 556-7777 or (844) 556-0444 (toll-free) from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. It will be closed during state holidays.