Ramsey County commissioners approve raises for themselves, though 3 plan to depart before they kick in

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Ramsey County commissioners voted themselves a pay raise at a meeting earlier this week — adding 3% for board members and 5% for the chair effective 2025.

The raise — described as a cost-of-living increase — moves commissioner salaries from $101,280 to $104,077 and the chair from $104,477 to $109,338. In addition, each commissioner will be awarded an annual allowance of $7,200 to cover work-related expenses.

Not all of the seven-member board will see that money, as three departures are imminent. Commissioners Victoria Reinhardt and Nicole Frethem have chosen not to run for re-election this November, and Board Chair Trista Martinson will step down this summer to run Ramsey and Washington counties’ waste-to-energy facility. Commissioner Mary Jo McGuire will be on the ballot for re-election.

The county board has sought to keep their pay increases in step with those awarded to the county’s largest labor units, which would have added up to a 2.25% increase for most members. The county board chose to forgo a .5% increase in 2021 during the economic uncertainty of the pandemic, so they included an additional .5% increase for next year in order to reach “parity with general wage increases given to employees since 2020,” according to the salary ordinance approved by the board Tuesday.

The board chair’s salary increased 5% “in order to compensate the role of the county board chair more equitably for the additional duties and responsibilities of the elected position.”

In a discussion before the vote, Frethem noted that the county’s home rule charter directs the board to set their own salaries. She said the job of a commissioner involves long hours and commitments.

“It’s not a part-time job,” Frethem said during the board meeting Tuesday. She also noted the need for competitive pay to attract quality candidates to the board.

Commissioner Rena Moran agreed.

“I’m on 27 different committees,” Moran said. “I’m starting early and going home late.”

Commissioner Victoria Reinhardt noted that the commitment of a member of the board — if done right — is much more than part-time.

“We don’t want someone coming in here who views this as a part-time job,” Reinhardt.

Still, the prospect of setting one’s own salary has struck some observers as politically unsavory.

“You’re proposing $21,000-plus in collective salary increases,” said Greg Copeland, a former candidate for state office, during a public hearing on the question on June 18. “You don’t have to actually raise your salaries. You can actually cut your salaries.”

In 2022, the League of Minnesota Cities conducted a study of commissioner salaries across the state and found a wide range, with much higher salaries for the most populous counties in the Twin Cities metro compared to more rural areas. The base salary for the Washington County commissioners at the time was about $72,000. In Carver and Anoka counties, it was $75,000. In Hennepin County, it was nearly $114,000. In Ramsey County, it was just over $97,000.

With a population of less than 6,000 people, Lincoln County, located near the South Dakota border, paid its county commissioners $16,000.

Before the vote, Chair Trista Martinson said that county officials should consider a fresh salary study ahead of next year’s vote on the matter.

The vote approving the raises was 6-0 with Rafael Ortega absent.

Frederick Melo contributed to this report.

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Gophers guard Cam Christie selected by L.A. Clippers in NBA draft

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It took a bit longer than expected, but Cam Christie heard his name called in the NBA draft in New York City on Thursday.

The Los Angeles Clippers selected the Gophers freshman guard in the second round with the 46th overall pick.

Christie was at ESPN studios with his parents for the draft show and he shook hands with NBA deputy commissioner Mark Tatum as he put on a Clippers hat.

Christie of Arlington Heights, Ill., will be going to the same city as his older brother Max, who was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers with the 35th pick in 2022. The Christie parents, Katrina and Max Sr., will be able to go to the same spot to watch their boys play home games in the NBA.

“It means a lot. It’s super cool to be NBA brothers,” Cam said on ESPN. “It’s really dope. I thank him a lot for everything he has taught me. I’m super excited to get out there and start competing against him.”

Christie was considered fifth on ESPN’s list of “best available” players at the start of the second round and moved to the top that list for a while as picks further down that list came off the board.

“I think Cam Christie is a better prospect coming out of school than Max Christie was,” ESPN analyst Jonathan Givony said on air. “I had him ranked 14 spots higher on my big board than the Clippers actually took him. … He might be the best pull-up shooter in this draft. … I went to watch him workout here in New York. My eyes popped out at this kid’s talent. It’s going to be a big-time steal for (Clippers president) Lawrence Frank and the Clippers. It’s going to take him a year or two to get his body right and improve on the defensive end, but this guy has incredible upside.”

On Wednesday, Christie wasn’t able to be the Gophers’ first first-round pick since Kris Humphries in 2004, but he is the first Gopher player taken in the draft since center Daniel Oturu of St. Paul was selected by the Timberwolves with the 33rd pick in the 2020 draft.

Christie improved throughout his single season of college basketball. He moved into the starting lineup during the winter and became an all-Big Ten freshman team honoree, putting up 11.3 points per game and 39% 3-point shooting across 33 games.

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As COVID-19 ticks up in some places, US health officials recommend a fall vaccination campaign

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By MIKE STOBBE

NEW YORK (AP) — With fresh COVID-19 cases bubbling up in some parts of the country, health officials are setting course for a fall vaccination campaign.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday recommended new shots for all Americans this fall.

Officials acknowledged the need for shots is not as dire as it was only a few years ago. Most Americans have some degree of immunity from being infected, from past vaccinations or both. COVID-19 deaths and hospitalizations last month were at about their lowest point since the pandemic first hit the United States in 2020.

But immunity wanes, new coronavirus variants keep emerging and there are still hundreds of COVID-19-associated deaths and thousands of hospitalizations reported each week.

What’s more, health officials have reported upticks this month in COVID-19-associated emergency room visits and hospitalizations, and a pronounced increase in positive test results in the southwestern U.S.

It’s not clear whether that’s a sign of a coming summer wave — which has happened before — or just a blip, said Lauren Ancel Meyers of the University of Texas, who leads a research team that tracks COVID-19.

“We’ll have to see what happens in the coming weeks,” she said.

Earlier this month, the Food and Drug Administration — following the guidance of its own panel of expert advisers — told vaccine manufacturers to target the JN.1 version of the virus. But a week later, the FDA told manufacturers that if they could still switch, a better target might be an offshoot subtype called KP.2.

At a Thursday meeting at the CDC in Atlanta, infectious disease experts unanimously recommended the updated vaccines for Americans age 6 months and older. The CDC director signed off on the recommendation later in the day. The shots are expected to become available in August and September.

Health officials have told Americans to expect a yearly update to COVID-19 vaccines, just like they are recommended to get a new shot each fall to protect against the latest flu strains.

But many Americans aren’t heeding the CDC’s advice.

As of last month, less than one-quarter of U.S. adults and 14% of children were up to date in their COVID shots. Surveys show shrinking percentages of Americans think COVID-19 is a major health threat to the U.S. population, and indicate that fewer doctors are urging patients to get updated vaccines.

CDC officials on Thursday presented recent survey information in which about 23% of respondents said they would definitely get an updated COVID-19 shot this fall, but 33% said they definitely would not.

Meanwhile, the CDC’s Bridge Access Program — which has been paying for shots for uninsured U.S. adults — is expected to shut down in August because of discontinued funding. The program paid for nearly 1.5 million doses from September to last month.

“It is a challenge with this program going away,” said the CDC’s Shannon Stokley.

About 1.2 million U.S. COVID-associated deaths have been reported since early 2020, according to the CDC. The toll was most intense in the winter of 2020-2021, when weekly deaths surpassed 20,000. About 1 out of every 100 Americans ages 75 and older were hospitalized with COVID in the last four years, CDC officials said Thursday.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Last-place Wings end Lynx’s six-game winning streak in Dallas

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Coach Cheryl Reeve reminded the Lynx before Thursday afternoon’s game that their opponent was a desperate team.

And it played like one.

Roughly 40 hours after defeating the team with the WNBA’s best record to win the Commissioner’s Cup, the Lynx started fast against the league’s last-place team but were outscored by 19 points over the final three quarters in 94-88 loss at Dallas.

“This is a job, we need to come prepared no matter what the circumstances are,” said Napheesa Collier, who led Minnesota with 29 points and 11 rebounds.

Alanna Smith had 15 points, six rebounds, four assists and three blocks. All her points came on a career-high five treys, the last coming in the opening minute of the second half.

In addition to its Commissioner’s Cup win over New York, which does not count in the season standings, Minnesota (13-4) had officially won six straight regular-season games and nine of 10.

Losers of 11 straight entering the game, Dallas (4-13) shot 48.7 percent from the field, the best by a Lynx opponent this season.

“We shot 47 percent, 42 from three, we had our usual 27 assists for 33 field goals. We scored 88 points, and that should be enough to win a game,” Reeve said.

“We were not defensively who we needed to be today, and that was our greatest disappointment. We weren’t difficult to play against. They created their own breaks, they created the pace about themselves, they created confidence to go where they wanted to go and our resistance in keeping them from getting downhill was little to none. Our effort on the glass was typical, and sometimes that’s going to bite you in the (rear), and it bit us in the (rear). You can’t give up 14 offensive rebounds and just keep letting them get multiple shots.”

The Lynx were outscored 48-30 in the paint. Dallas guards penetrated almost at will, and Teaira McCowan, a 6-foot-7 center, scored 17 points and grabbed 12 rebounds.

Down 71-70 after three quarters — just the third time this season the Lynx have trailed heading to the fourth quarter — and trailing by six midway through the fourth quarter, Collier hit a jumper, Bridget Carleton added her third trey and Dorka Juhász scored for an 83-82 Lynx lead.

Odyssey Sims, who finished with 18 points in her first game after signing a hardship contract Tuesday, scored on a layup with 3:10 left to put Dallas up 90-84.

A Carleton jumper got Minnesota within 91-88 with 1:02 to go, but Jacy Sheldon sank a three for the Wings 13 seconds later. Carleton, Natisha Hiedeman and Collier missed late threes. Minnesota made just one of five long-range shots in the final quarter after going 10 for 21 through three periods.

Playing a desperate Dallas squad, the Lynx started hot from deep to open a 13-point lead after one quarter. Smith had three triples and Carleton two in the period.

Smith drained her fourth three to bump the Lynx lead to 15 with 3:20 left in the second quarter, but the Wings scored the final 13 points before the break.

“Offensively, we started doing more complicated things. They started playing off either our missed shots or bad decisions, turnovers, whatever. They turned it up,” Reeve said, singling out the aggressiveness of Wings guard Arike Ogunbowale. “Her efforts defensively gave the others confidence to get up and pressure. Our response to that was not great, took bad shots, got rushed, turned it over.”