St. Paul City Council weighs extending eviction notice to 60 days

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With concerns about an eviction crisis growing in the wake of Operation Metro Surge, the St. Paul City Council is considering a temporary requirement that landlords give renters 60 days notice before filing an eviction action with the courts.

If approved, the requirement would double the 30-day notice requirement that had been poised to take effect May 14. The 60-day requirement would roll out at the same time as the city’s new tenant protections package, which was approved by the council a year ago, and run through Dec. 31.

Council Member HwaJeong noted that eviction filings have hit new records since the pandemic, and the immigration crackdown — which shuttered businesses and left many immigrant workers in hiding — has only made matters worse for those already in a vulnerable housing situation.

“We are responding to a crisis layered on a pre-existing one,” said Kim, introducing the 60-day ordinance amendment on Wednesday. “This is not an eviction moratorium. It does not cancel rent. … This is a targeted, time-limited response.”

The state of Minnesota has mandated a 14-day notice for new eviction filings since early 2024. Two weeks “is not nearly enough time to find … a mutual aid fund,” Kim said.

Speaking in favor of the proposal, Council Member Nelsie Yang said immigrant families will be shouldering the economic impacts of Operation Metro Surge for months.

“There are families I’m in touch with right now who are still waiting for their loved one to come back, and they don’t know when they’ll be back,” Yang said.

The council will host a public hearing on the proposed ordinance amendment March 11, with a possible vote March 18.

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Women’s basketball: Gophers were different, Mara Braun wasn’t

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As a freshman, Mara Braun quickly found her shoulders full. Because of injuries, the guard from Wayzata — part of Lindsay Whalen’s Top 10, all-Minnesota recruiting class — was doing it all by the end of the season.

A natural off guard, she began playing big minutes at the point. She was the team’s go-to scorer, averaging a team-best 15.6 games a game. She was the Gophers’ best scorer off the dribble, led the team in 3-point attempts (186) and makes (65) and averaged a team-high 32.9 minutes.

Minnesota guard Mara Braun smiles with a teammate during the Gophers’ 78-73 victory at Illinois last Sunday. No. 19 Minnesota begins Big Ten Conference tournament play on Friday at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. (Keelen Barlow/Gophers Athletics)

That team finished 11-19 overall, 4-14 in the Big Ten.

Sidelined by a foot that required two surgeries to repair, Braun spent the next two seasons as a student coach, watching while her teammates grew, and coach Dawn Plitzuweit added talented new teammates.

Last year, the Gophers won the postseason Women’s Basketball Tournament and a program-best 25 games. So, Braun knew the team she was rejoining on the court was considerably better. But finding room for Braun wasn’t difficult. It was a luxury.

“She’s had a spot,” Plitzuweit said, “and she’s done really well with it.”

Braun is now averaging a career-low 11.7 points, but on a team with five players scoring in double digits — Tori McKinney (13.6), Grace Grocholski (12.5), Amaya Battle (10.9) and Sophie Hart (10.9) are the others — on a team that heads into this week’s Big Ten Conference tournament with the No. 4 seed.

After receiving two byes, Minnesota (22-7, 13-5) will play in a quarterfinal Friday against Ohio State or the winner of Wednesday’s late game between Wisconsin and Illinois. Tip is set for 2:30 p.m. CST.

“I think we’re pretty confident, but also it’s just such a good opportunity to do something we’ve never done before,” Braun said. “Usually we’re playing on the first day, so it’s nice to be here, to be able to go and play on Friday, and with the momentum we have.”

Braun also is playing her best basketball at the right time, averaging 13.7 points. 4.0 rebounds and 2.7 assists while making 46.9 percent of her 3-point attempts (23 for 49). As important, she’s having a blast.

“It’s really fun,” she said. “We’re so excited just to be loose and have fun with it.”

Playing loose wasn’t always easy for Braun. After the Gophers’ victory over then-No. 10 Ohio State on Feb. 18, she acknowledged that she used to stew over mistakes on the court. Back playing after two years largely spent rehabbing a serious foot injury, that’s no longer an issue.

That, she said, wouldn’t be fair to her teammates, or to the Braun who spent two years working to get back on the court.

“It would be selfish to hang my head and be so upset about something that happened on the court when I’m on the court playing,” she said. “That’s something I wanted to do these past two seasons. So, to me it’s just selfish to my past (self), wanting to be on the court so badly. And now I am.”

Plitzuweit said Braun’s game is rounding out, on both ends of the floor, and that her leadership has been invaluable on and off the court. It’s not all about points.

“She wants to be the very best, she wants to continue playing, and I believe she’s going to be able to do that at a very, very high level provided she stays healthy and all those kinds of things,” Plitzuweit said. “But to be at your best, you have to grow your game, and that’s what she’s trying to do.”

When Braun arrived on campus with Battle, Mallory Heyer and Niamaya Holloway in 2022, she said the goal was to be part of the team that reaches the heights, and generates the excitement, of the 2004 Final Four team.

Heyer is gone, transferred to Oregon, but Braun, Battle and Holloway are seeing their goals manifest.
No. 19 in the Associated Press poll, and No. 8 in the NET rankings, the Gophers are bound for their first NCAA tournament since 2019 and have a good chance to play host to first- and second-round regional games at Williams Arena.

“We’ve been through this all, the start of it and the hard times. We got through it together,” Braun said. “I think because we did go through it together, everyone has bought in.”

Minnesota guard Mara Braun, right, drives on Ohio State’s Kennedy Cambridge during the 23rd-ranked Gophers’ 74-61 victory at Williams Arena on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. Braun finished with 18 points. (Claudia Staut/Gophers Athletics)

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St. Paul City Council Member Nelsie Yang replaces Kim as council vice president

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The St. Paul City Council switched up its leadership team on Wednesday, electing Council Member Nelsie Yang as its new vice president. Yang, one of the council’s youngest members, replaces Council Member HwaJeong Kim, who has held the role since joining the council in January 2024.

Nelsie Yang. (Courtesy of the City of St. Paul)

Rebecca Noecker will continue to serve as council president, and Cheniqua Johnson will remain chair of the city’s Housing and Redevelopment Authority. Johnson will also serve as chair of the council’s budget committee, which had also been led by Kim.

Kim is the executive director of Minnesota Voice, a progressive nonprofit dedicated to voter registration, civic engagement and training community organizers, and took a visible role organizing against Immigration end Customs Enforcement detainments during Operation Metro Surge.

The vote of the seven-member council was unanimous.

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Curling rocked again as 2 stones are stolen at the Milan Cortina Paralympics

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By TALES AZZONI

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — It’s another scandal for curling, this time at the Paralympics.

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Two stones that were going to be used in the wheelchair curling event that began Wednesday at the Milan Cortina Paralympic Games have been stolen.

The incident came a couple of weeks after the sport was in the headlines during the Olympics as the Canadian team was accused of cheating.

World Curling told The Associated Press that local authorities were investigating the circumstances that led to the granite rocks being stolen from the Curling Olympic Stadium.

“The spare stones from the set are now being used and have been brought to the same specifications as the rest of the set so there has been no impact on the competition,” World Curling said in an email.

The Milan Cortina Paralympics will officially kick off with the opening ceremony on Friday, but the schedule for wheelchair curling started Wednesday.

The Olympic scandal rocked the usually sedate world of curling — a sport that tends to fall off the radar outside the Olympics.

Slider, the official mascot of the tournament, interacts in the crowd during Draw 5 at the Brier curling event in St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (Paul Daly/The Canadian Press via AP)

In the round-robin phase in Cortina, Oskar Eriksson of Sweden accused Marc Kennedy, Canada’s vice skip, of double-touching the rock after initially releasing it down the sheet of ice. Kennedy responded with an outburst full of expletives. Canada was cleared of wrongdoing and eventually won its first gold in men’s curling since the 2014 Sochi Games.

The Canadian women’s team had also been accused of the same double-touch violation.

AP Winter Paralympics: https://apnews.com/hub/paralympic-games