Two Ramsey County officials depart for new jobs with city of Bloomington

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A pair of Ramsey County officials have taken new jobs recently as assistant city managers in Bloomington.

Kathy Hedin, who has served as the deputy county manager for health and wellness since 2020, will become the suburb’s assistant city manager for external services on July 22.

Kathy Hedin (Courtesy of Ramsey County)

Elizabeth Tolzmann was chief of staff under former county manager Ryan O’Connor, who took a new job with the Metropolitan Council in February. Tolzmann was hired in May as Bloomington’s assistant city manager for internal services.

Hedin has more than 20 years of experience working in local government, and Bloomington City Manager Jamie Verbrugge said in a news release that her “expertise and vision will be invaluable” in her new role.

“Kathy distinguished herself by her commitment to building trusting relationships, thoughtful and collaborative leadership style, determination, and her great kindness and empathy,” Verbrugge said.

Tolzmann previously served as assistant city manager for Bloomington between 2015 and 2017, and is an adjunct professor of law at University of St. Thomas Law School.

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Burnsville officers who opened fire against gunman were justified in use of force, prosecutor says

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Burnsville police officers who opened fired on Shannon Gooden in February were legally justified in their use of force, the Dakota County attorney announced Tuesday.

A 10-page memo from County Attorney Kathy Keena about her review of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension investigation provides more information about what happened on Feb. 18 when Gooden fatally shot Burnsville Police Officers Paul Elmstrand and Matthew Ruge and Burnsville Firefighter/Paramedic Adam Finseth when they responded Feb. 18 to a domestic incident.

Three Burnsville officers fired their guns during the incident, and one wounded Gooden in the leg.

“There is absolutely no doubt the officers were justified in using deadly force to protect themselves, other officers and first responders, and members of the public from death or great bodily harm,” Keena wrote.

Gooden later shot himself and died by suicide, according to the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Elmstrand, Ruge and Finseth “embodied the spirit of a public servant as they selflessly acted to protect seven children from the hands of Shannon Gooden,” Keena said in a statement.

This is a breaking news story and will be updated.

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The NYC Neighborhoods Leading, and Lagging, on Affordable Housing

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“The reality is that we have a housing crisis, but the South Bronx cannot bear the burden of affordable housing on its own,” said Councilmember Rafael Salamanca, whose district produced the greatest number of affordable units last year and over the past decade. “We need all 51 council districts to do their fair share.”

Chris Janaro

City data compiled by the New York Housing Conference shows how many affordable units were built in each City Council district from 2014-2023.

While New York City contends with a lack of available housing and record-high homelessness, a new report highlights which neighborhoods are bearing the brunt of affordable residential construction, and which are lagging behind.

The latest NYC Housing Tracker Report, released Thursday by the New York Housing Conference (NYHC), reveals the total number of affordable units created in each City Council district since 2014. As found in previous analyses, production was concentrated in just a handful of the city’s 51 districts, many of which were already high-density neighborhoods with higher populations of people of color.

According to the report, 70 percent of residents in the 10 districts producing the most affordable housing are Black or Latinx, compared to 30 percent of residents in the 10 districts that produced the fewest new units. 

“The overall data is the same story that we reported on last time,” Rachel Fee, executive director at NYHC told City Limits. “We have communities of color in neighborhoods where land costs are lower, producing the bulk of the affordable housing, and then we have low-density communities that are really opting out from being part of the solution and producing no affordable housing or very little.”

One glaring example is Bronx Council District 17, which saw the greatest number of new affordable housing units built last year—1,266 apartments, or 8.9 percent of the city’s 14,277 unit total—matching the output of the bottom 28 districts combined.

Although the city’s housing production in 2023 was the highest in decades, it falls short of addressing the 1.4 percent housing vacancy rate revealed by the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) in February—yet there is some cause for optimism for the future, housing advocates say. 

With the state’s passage of the Affordable Neighborhoods for New Yorkers (ANNY) incentive earlier this year—which replaces the expired 421-a tax benefit for developers who include affordable housing units in projects—paired with the potential approval of Mayor Eric Adams’ City of Yes for Housing Opportunity rezoning, development could not only increase, but also be more evenly distributed across the five boroughs.

“We’re not gonna see dramatic changes overnight. But I do think we have a real focus from our elected officials on providing solutions,” said Fee. Those changes, she added, are likely to allow more housing to be built in lower-density neighborhoods.

The new city budget, passed over the weekend, included a $2 billion boost in capital housing funds. And beginning next year, the city is expected to start work on a plan that will set housing production targets for each community district, the result of Council Speaker Adrienne Adams’ Fair Housing Framework passed last year.

“I think the other really important thing to know is that in addition to the tax tools, the zoning changes, we have a City Council that is demanding greater investment in affordable housing,” Fee added.

Councilmember Susan Zhuang represents District 43, which encompasses the Bensonhurst neighborhood in Brooklyn. Newly elected in 2023, Zhuang’s district placed last in the city for affordable housing construction over the last decade, with only 27 affordable homes created, something she said she’s pushing to change, especially when it comes to affordable senior housing. 

“The first thing I [did] after I was elected into office, I contacted HPD, also the land use department of City Council, to try to find public space in my district able to build [on],” said Zhuang during a phone call following the report’s release. The will to build is there, but finding city-owned land available to develop has been challenging, she said. 

Brooklyn Community Board 11 in her district voted against the mayor’s City of Yes for Housing Opportunity, which would relax zoning requirements to facilitate more residential development. The proposal includes the “Town Center Zoning” component, which would allow for the construction of apartments above commercial businesses.

“So we need to build taller, but at the same time, we need to have a balance,” said Zhuang, who believes there are likely some elements of the proposal that her constituents may like—just not all of them. “I have to represent my community. That’s my first priority.”

According to Councilmember Salamanca, the fear of constituent reprisal could be curtailed by the passage of City of Yes. He used former Bronx District 13 Councilmember Marjorie Velázquez as an example: after having a change of heart and endorsing a residential rezoning along Bruckner Boulevard last year, she failed to win reelection, partly due to public backlash.

“Her community was up in arms, and she lost the election because of it,” Salamanca told City Limits. If the City of Yes plan passes, he added, it would allow property owners more opportunities to build as-of-right, without having to seek the Council’s approval for a zoning change.  

“I think that what the mayor is doing here is kind of striking the right balance, changing the zoning laws, which will make it easier for a councilmember in a community board to negotiate a project because once it’s law, it’s no longer, ‘Oh, we don’t want this,’” he said. 

To reach the reporter behind this story, contact Chris@citylimits.org. To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

Biden heads out on public events blitz as White House pushes back on pressure to leave the race

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By COLLEEN LONG

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House announced Tuesday that President Joe Biden will meet with Democratic lawmakers and governors, sit for a network TV interview and hold a press conference in the coming days as he pushes back against growing pressure to step aside in the 2024 race after his disastrous performance in last week’s debate with Republican Donald Trump.

“We really want to turn the page on this,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said of the intensifying calls for Biden to bow out of the race. She added that the 81-year-old president had no intention of stepping aside, characterizing his debate failings as simply evidence of “a bad night” when he had a cold.

The White House was also holding an all-staff meeting on Wednesday, billed as a morale-booster following the debate and a chance for the senior team to keep the staff focused around governing, according to three people familiar with the details who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss a private meeting.

But Democratic leaders were increasingly signaling that they were not buying White House attempts to brush off Biden’s performance in the face-off, when he gave halting and nonsensical answers, as just a momentary lapse.

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told MSNBC that she believes “it is a legitimate question” whether Biden’s halting performance is just “an episode or is this a condition.”

“When people ask that question, it’s legitimate — of both candidates,” Pelosi said.

Pelosi said she had not spoken with Biden since the debate, but she emphasized that the president is on “top of his game, in terms of knowing the issues and what is at stake.”

Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas became the first Democratic member of Congress to publicly call for Biden to step down. He said Biden should “make the painful and difficult decision” to withdraw, citing the president’s inability to “effectively defend his many accomplishments” in the debate.

Rep. Jared Golden, a moderate Democrat from Maine, said in a local newspaper column Tuesday that the debate “didn’t rattle me as it has others, because the outcome of this election has been clear to me for months: While I don’t plan to vote for him, Donald Trump is going to win. And I’m OK with that.”

Jean-Pierre said Biden, who has not taken questions from reporters since Thursday night’s debate, would meet with Democratic governors and top congressional leaders on Wednesday. And Biden also agreed to sit for an interview Friday with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos that will air Friday. He has planned trips to Wisconsin on Friday and Philadelphia on Monday. And will hold a press conference during the NATO summit in Washington next week.

The president’s stepped-up schedule comes after a private discussion within Biden’s campaign about what can be done to counteract the damaging impression left by last week’s debate.

“We’re going to get out there, across the country. Americans are going to see him for themselves,” Jean-Pierre said at a White House briefing, rejecting any suggestion that the president undergo cognitive testing or provide additional information on his medical condition.

When asked whether the president had a degenerative illness or dementia, Jean-Pierre said: “No. And I hope you’re asking the other guy the same question,” she said, referring to Trump, who is 78 and once challenged Biden to a cognitive test, only to confuse who administered the test to him in the next sentence.

___

Associated Press writers Stephen Groves and Zeke Miller contributed to this approach.