Minneapolis Local Pulse
Good morning, this is Minneapolis Local Pulse for Sunday, June fourteenth. We wake up to clear skies and that classic Minnesota mild stretch. The National Weather Service says we sit in the low seventies this afternoon with plenty of sun, a light northwest breeze around ten to fifteen miles an hour, and a cool, clear night dropping to the low fifties. That means we can comfortably bike along the West River Parkway, hit Lake Bde Maka Ska, or grab a table on a patio without worrying about storms today. We do need to start with public safety. CBS Minnesota reports a recent triple shooting in north Minneapolis that leaves one person dead and two hurt, part of an ongoing pattern of late night gun violence on the North Side. Police continue to investigate and increase patrols around West Broadway and nearby residential blocks. We stay aware, check on our neighbors, and use the city’s anonymous tip lines if we know anything that can help. At City Hall, the council focuses this week on nuts and bolts issues that touch our daily lives: street repair funding, summer youth jobs, and fine tuning the city’s new rental protections. State lawmakers also plan midweek updates at the Capitol, with House Television streaming a Session Daily Update on Wednesday that includes discussion of housing affordability and public safety funding for Hennepin County. On the housing front, local brokers say median home prices in Minneapolis sit around the mid three hundreds, with condos downtown still lagging a bit while single family homes near Nokomis, Linden Hills, and Northeast move quickly, often with multiple offers. Rents for a one bedroom in popular neighborhoods like Uptown and North Loop hover near fifteen to sixteen hundred dollars a month as new luxury buildings come online but older stock fills fast. In the job market, employers across the metro post thousands of openings, especially in health care, tech, construction, and hospitality. Hospitals along Chicago Avenue and University Avenue continue hiring nurses, medical assistants, and support staff, while restaurants on Eat Street, Hennepin Avenue, and in the North Loop look for cooks and servers as summer events ramp up. Culturally, Juneteenth celebrations start to blossom across the city. The Minnesota Spokesman Recorder highlights today’s Northside Juneteenth barbecue and family swim at Webber Natural Pool on Webber Parkway from eleven to three, and we look ahead to the Soul of the Southside festival at Lake Street and Minnehaha later in the week. Over at the Basilica of Saint Mary on Hennepin, morning Mass and quiet chapel hours give us a contemplative start to the day before the city’s music and arts scene takes over. In sports, it is a busy stretch. The Twins continue their homestand at Target Field, trying to climb the division standings. The Lynx push through their summer slate at Target Center, while Minnesota United prepares for the next match at Allianz Field, with fans from across Minneapolis packing the Green Line and Snelling Avenue. Local high school summer programs ramp up too, as Minneapolis Public Schools athletes gather for off season training and club tournaments. For a feel good note, neighbors in Powderhorn and Longfellow organize small cleanups and book swaps around their parks this weekend, trading novels, kids books, and recipes while keeping the green spaces tidy. It is a small but powerful reminder that we shape the city we live in, block by block. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in. This has been Minneapolis Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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