Duluth mayor wants to avoid escalating war of words with Kathy Cargill on Park Point

posted in: Society | 0

DULUTH — Mayor Roger Reinert has declined public comment on the most discussed story in the local news this week: the dissing he recently received from Kathy Cargill in the Wall Street Journal.

Reinert wrote the billionaire twice, asking her to share her plans for 13 Park Point homes and 22 parcels of land North Shore LS LLC recently purchased on her behalf and for much more than their assessed values.

Several of the homes have since been demolished, prompting local concern.

Gary Meader / Duluth News Tribune

Citing the city’s housing shortage, Reinert wrote: “Any loss of residential housing is not helpful.”

Reinert said he had nothing more to say about Cargill’s activities or intentions Friday.

But in broad terms, he said, “We need to be mindful of housing.

“We’re talking every day about how we can add to the inventory, and we’re going to remain vigilant on that issue.”

Reinert requested Cargill and/or her representatives meet with city staff and members of the Park Point Community Club.

He tempered that ask with an acknowledgment:

“I understand and respect your right to make these purchases through the private real property market.”

Cargill responds — via the Wall Street Journal

2925 Minnesota Ave. is one of several properties on Park Point purchased by Kathy Cargill. The property is seen on Wednesday, March 27, 2024, in Duluth. (Clint Austin / Duluth Media Group)

His letters and the local news coverage they attracted were not well received, to say the least.

Cargill expressed her offense, telling the Wall Street Journal that she had soured on her original plans to beautify Park Point and perhaps bring pickleball courts and a coffee shop to the neighborhood, where she also owns a $2.5 million home.

“There’s another community out there with more welcoming people than that small-minded community,” she told the Journal.

As for Reinert, Cargill made a comment that quickly went viral.

“I think an expression that we all know — don’t pee in your Cheerios — well, he kind of peed in his Cheerios, and definitely I’m not going to do anything to benefit that community,” she told the Journal.

No comment, but …

The home at 4202 Minnesota Ave. is one of the several properties on Park Point purchased by Kathy Cargill. The property is seen on Wednesday, March 27, in Duluth. Cargill has purchased 13 properties in the Park Point neighborhood of Duluth since September 2021.Clint Austin / Duluth Media Group

Rather than respond and risk escalating an already fraught situation, Reinert has declined all public comment on the article, despite numerous requests for a reaction from local and national media.

According to 3rd District City Councilor Roz Randorf, who represents Park Point, the city attorney has recommended city officials avoid any possible further provocation of Cargill.

Randorf signed on to one of Reinert’s letters to Cargill and said: “We wanted to encourage an open dialog, so she could have a successful project. We wanted it to be a good project for both her and the neighborhood. That’s been our intent the whole time.”

One thing’s not negotiable in Randorf’s eyes, however.

While Cargill told the Wall Street Journal her plans for the Park Point vacation home are “to make it even more private than it is,” Randorf said public beach access and open streets must be maintained.

“Park Point will remain an open neighborhood with all the same access. I will fight to make sure none of that changes,” she said.

Reinert said he shares Randorf’s continued commitment to maintaining public access.

“The beach is public, and it will remain public. That’s one of our city’s treasured assets,” he told the News Tribune Friday.

“All the paper streets will remain,” Reinert said, referring to numerous street easements for unbuilt roadways all along the point that offer visitors direct access to the waterfront, regardless of their means.

Cereal food drive

1521 Minnesota Ave. is one of several properties on Park Point purchased by Kathy Cargill. The property is seen on Wednesday, March 27, 2024, in Duluth. (Clint Austin / Duluth Media Group)

Cargill did not respond to a request for clarification of her intentions by the News Tribune on Friday.

So far, Reinert said he’s aware of no effort by Cargill or her representatives to communicate directly with the city, aside from her remarks in the Wall Street Journal.

Reinert said he has been encouraged by Duluth’s response, though, pointing to a cereal food drive touched off by Cargill’s recent comments.

“That’s so classic Duluth, to take something that could be considered negative or critical and then to turn it into a public good,” he said.

Who is Kathy Cargill?

The Minnesota Secretary of State’s office lists Kathy Cargill as the manager of North Shore LS.

She is married to James R. Cargill II, who Forbes identifies as one of 12 billionaire heirs to Cargill, an agribusiness juggernaut that’s the nation’s second-largest privately held company.

The magazine estimated James Cargill’s net worth at $5 billion, placing him in 233rd place on its list of the nation’s wealthiest people.

Related Articles

News |


Joe Soucheray: Kathy Cargill had me at ‘McLaren’ …

News |


Duluth takes billionaire Kathy Cargill’s profane Cheerios remark, and runs with it

News |


Charles Nies named chancellor of U of M Duluth campus

News |


Families of men shot by law enforcement reach $165K settlement in lawsuit over obtaining BCA case files

News |


Kathy Cargill speaks up on controversial Park Point home purchases in Duluth

 

 

White House Easter egg roll draws a huge crowd after storm-delayed start

posted in: News | 0

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Thunder and lightning delayed the start of the Easter egg roll at the White House for 90 minutes on Monday, but the event eventually kicked off under gray skies with a large crowd including many youngsters wearing ponchos or colorful jackets against light rain.

More than 40,000 people — 10,000 more than last year — were expected to attend, attempting to coax hard-boiled eggs across the lawn to a finish line. This year’s theme was “EGG-ucation,” and led by Jill Biden, a teacher for more than 30 years.

“Easter reminds us of the power of hope and renewal, and sacrifice and resurrection,” President Joe Biden told attendees, speaking from the White House balcony, where he was flanked by two large Easter bunnies, one wearing sunglasses like his. “But mainly love and grace towards one another.”

Biden said this year’s egg roll was a time to “cherish the blessings, the possibilities that we have as Americans.”

“That’s what I see in our country. We’re a great nation because we’re a good people,” he said. “Our values are solid.”

The president then headed out on the lawn, bending down to help a few youngsters with their eggs. He blew a whistle to officially start the roll — an annual tradition first held in 1878.

Egg roll guests included thousands of military and veteran families, their caregivers and survivors. Members of the general public claimed tickets through an online lottery and were being admitted in nine waves until the evening.

Among those participating with the children was Harry Dunn, a former police officer who defended the U.S. Capitol against rioters on Jan. 6 and is now running for Congress in Maryland. Texas Democratic Rep. Colin Allred, now a Senate candidate, high fived kids after their rolls.

A large schoolhouse erected on the South Lawn offered kids activities in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM — including making circuit-breakers or simulating a fossil dig. Youngsters also wrote notes to U.S. troops and first responders with Operation Gratitude, a nonprofit organization.

“I’m a teacher so I love any time when we can turn the White House into a classroom,” the first lady said, noting that “the South Lawn is transforming into our learning playground and school community.”

She noted that this year’s setup included a reading nook and exhibits on space travel and dinosaur fossils.

The first couple also sat Monday for an interview with NBC’s “Today” and said that Easter for them on Sunday featuring putting some dollar bills in some plastic easter eggs and holding a hunt with their grandchildren. “We’re still missing one,” joked the first lady.

The president drew criticism from top conservatives, and the campaign of former President Donald Trump, who is now running to reclaim the White House, by proclaiming March 31 as “Transgender Day of Visibility ″ on a year when Easter also fell on the day.

But Biden offered a message of unity on Monday, saying the egg roll was taking place at “the people’s house.”

“We just like to open it up,” he told NBC of the White House. “It always makes me feel good to look out there and see, just average Americans, walking around and looking at what’s going around ’cause they own it.”

Biden was asked about his final campaign as he seeks his second term and said, “I just think people are so tired of the negativity that is propagated that they just want to get engaged.”

“They want to change things,” he said.

The first lady added that she’d been traveling the country campaigning and that “people are ready to go, and we’re going to win this.”

The first lady still teaches English and writing at a northern Virginia community college. She and President Biden did not host the egg roll during the first year of his administration in 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it resumed the last two years.

The event dates to the presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes, who opened the White House lawn to children after they were kicked off the grounds of the U.S. Capitol.

A Roadmap to Rebuilding Communities

posted in: News | 0

When we think of what our communities need, we usually think of affordable homes, good schools, and grocery stores. Not wide towering highways. Yet, in the past 70-some years, highways have dictated community development in urban centers. They’ve torn through low-income communities of color, displacing families, homes, and businesses. As a result, people move farther away; we languish in traffic, get home from work later, and spend less time with our family. We’ve accepted growing air pollution as the inevitable cost of the lives we’ve built around our cars and the neighborhoods we’ve built around highways. For many of us, we’ve never seen or imagined an alternative.  

But in her new book City Limits: Infrastructure, Inequality, and the Future of America’s Highways, Megan Kimble, a journalist covering transportation and housing (and former Texas Observer editor), tells Texans: It wasn’t always this way, nor does it have to be. By interweaving the history of the interstate highway system with stories from past and present community members of Houston’s Fifth Ward, East Austin, and Dallas’ Deep Ellum, Kimble shows that these urban neighborhoods were not always designed around never-ending highway expansion. And by spotlighting the current struggles of activists resisting the Texas Department of Transportation’s (TxDOT) efforts to widen highways there, the author reimagines our cities’ futures. 

City Limits: Infrastructure, Inequality, and the Future of America’s Highways

City Limits reveals the human consequences of our built environment. One character, O’Nari Burleson, was born and raised in Houston’s historically Black Fifth Ward before I-10 tore her community apart in the mid-1960s. Burleson describes a place where everyone knew everyone, where she walked only a few minutes to school and found everything she needed at thriving local businesses. 

Racism underlay highway development. After the Federal Highway Act authorized a 40,000-mile national system of interstate highways in 1944, Alfred Johnson, executive director of the lobby group American Association of State Highway Officials, said, “Some city officials expressed the view in the mid-1950s that the urban Interstates would give them a good opportunity to get rid of the local ‘n—rtown.’” The highways facilitated white flight from urban centers to suburban neighborhoods with racially restrictive covenants, while Black and Hispanic neighborhoods were redlined to deny families federally backed loans.  

By the time I-10 was opened in 1966, 1,220 structures were erased from the Fifth Ward, including 11 churches, five schools, and two hospitals. O’Nari started relying on car transport to get to school. Seven-hundred families left the neighborhood at this time. “When I grew up, it was just people everywhere. This used to be full of people, full to the brim,” Burleson says. But the “neighborhood grew quieter, streets emptier.” 

As in the Fifth Ward, the interstate highway came for Black communities in East Austin and Dallas’ Deep Ellum, neighborhoods that Freedmen had created to escape racism. These communities were cultural and commercial centers for Black people in Texas, but the state and federal transportation agencies only saw “blight” there. In 1950, the Interregional Highway, or I-35, was built, segregating Austin along racial lines. Over the next two decades, more than half a million homes along its east-side corridor would be displaced. In 1955, the Central Expressway tore through Deep Ellum, razing 54 city blocks. 

“We do not believe that the Interstate System is the vehicle for solving rush-hour traffic problems, or for local bottlenecks. … Rapid transit and mass transit systems are the solution.”

The history of the interstate highway system that Kimble unspools is a history of accumulated racist policies, flawed planning, and missed opportunities to make amends. 

In 1956, President Eisenhower signed the Interstate Highway Act, committing $25 billion to build 41,000 miles of interstate highways across the country over 13 years. The act created the Highway Trust Fund, diverting all taxes on gas and motor vehicles to interstate construction. What was left up for debate was whether the money should be used to connect cities—thus routing interstate traffic around urban areas—or to alleviate congestion within urban areas, routing the interstate through cities. 

General John S. Bragdon, tasked by Eisenhower with investigating the alternatives, wrote, “We do not believe that the Interstate System is the vehicle for solving rush-hour traffic problems, or for local bottlenecks. … Rapid transit and mass transit systems are the solution.”  

Bragdon added that communities should not be solely developed around transportation needs: “The highway plan should not be the central pattern around which a community develops. … The basic plan for all community development should be an economic growth and land use plan.” Even though Eisenhower agreed, Bragdon’s report never saw the light of day. Seeking reelection, Eisenhower buried the report to prevent blowback from local leaders eager to build more highways in their cities. 

Early on, Bragdon and transportation engineers noted the phenomenon of induced demand—meaning that when bigger roads are built, traffic increases to fill those roads, in turn reducing space for public transit. Yet successive federal and state transportation policies have only fueled this vicious cycle, committing money to highways over public transit at the behest of oil and auto industry lobbyists. 

In 2022, Texas Governor Greg Abbott approved the Unified Transportation Plan, an $85 billion, 10-year plan with 96 percent of its funding allocated to highway construction. State law requires TxDOT to use at least 97 percent of its funding for roads. As a result, Texas cities rely more on the federal government than the state for public transit funding, even though the federal Highway Trust Fund gives only 20 percent to public transportation. In 2021, President Joe Biden’s $2.3 billion infrastructure act committed only a fraction of transportation funds to public transit while highways received a 90 percent increase in funding. 

Instead of righting past wrongs, Kimble reveals that TxDOT is now doubling down on racist highway policies, demanding more homes, schools, and businesses be destroyed in the same affected communities to add more lanes to the highways. Without considering alternative plans or modes of transportation, TxDOT recites its slogan that traffic will be unsustainable otherwise. 

Many residents aren’t buying what the state agency is selling. Kimble follows community activists at door-knocking activities, protests, and numerous TxDOT hearings as they struggle to save their neighborhoods. In Houston, activists with Stop TxDOT I-45 won an agreement to address concerns around the loss of affordable housing and increase in air pollution. In Austin, members of Rethink35 are organizing to stop the expansion of I-35, and in Dallas, activists want to tear down I-345 and revitalize 245 acres of wasted land around the highway. These communities are linking up with a national movement of urban communities that want to demolish unwanted highways and use the land to build affordable housing, parks, schools, and local businesses—to serve people, not cars. 

Kimble concludes City Limits by highlighting the hopeful spirit of so many fighting to rebuild their communities. It’s an uphill battle challenging TxDOT, but they have no choice: “It’s our home,” a STOP TxDOT I-45 activist says. Kimble writes, “Like a suture over a scar … harm cannot be undone, it can only be repaired.” 

After all, there’s only so far people can move, only so much land we can allow TxDOT to take, and only so many hours in a day we can sit in traffic. 

Woodbury man arrested after allegedly assaulting a woman, barricading himself inside a house

posted in: News | 0

A Woodbury man was arrested early Monday after he allegedly assaulted a woman and then barricaded himself in a house for hours, authorities say.

Police were called to the 6100 block of Tahoe Road for a disturbance just after midnight, according to police reports. When officers arrived, they were told by the occupants that the disturbance had been resolved, the report states

However, at about 1:40 a.m., police were called back to the residence on another “disturbance” call. When officers responded, they were told that a man “was threatening himself and others inside the home with a weapon,” the report states.

The people inside the house “were able to escape … with police assistance, except the male suspect who barricaded himself in the home,” police said.

Washington County SWAT was called and responded to the scene and residents of neighboring townhomes were evacuated for safety, police said.

After several hours, officers convinced the man to surrender, authorities say. He was arrested without incident.

The man, whose name was not immediately released, is being “evaluated for injuries sustained prior to police arrival,” police said.

The incident remains under investigation.

Related Articles

Crime & Public Safety |


‘Hey, we built that!’ Forest Lake high school students get paid work experience through Career Launch class

Crime & Public Safety |


Was the Apple River stabbing murder or self-defense? Trial begins Monday.

Crime & Public Safety |


Cottage Grove: District 5M6 Lions Club plans day of doing good

Crime & Public Safety |


Stillwater man used Iowa woman’s funds to pay for pool, other home improvements, authorities say

Crime & Public Safety |


Families of men shot by law enforcement reach $165K settlement in lawsuit over obtaining BCA case files