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Why isn't Rochester's skyline a bit more impressive?
Why isn't Rochester's skyline a bit more impressive?

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Why isn't Rochester's skyline a bit more impressive?

May 31—Dear Answer Man: Why can't Rochester encourage at least some developers to think tall? Verticality shows we have arrived, that we are a place to live and work. Well-designed and architecturally interesting towers can be important landmarks, giving Rochester its own unique skyline and character. Can Rochester get something that truly stands out among its dull downtown buildings? — Disappointed Dan. Dear Disappointed, It seems like you're asking for two things: height and pizzazz. Preferably in the same building. Think New York City's Empire State Building or the Transamerica Pyramid in San Francisco, I assume. Well, don't expect something akin to the Burj Khalifa to be built on the old Post Bulletin site. That said, whatever replaces the old Post Bulletin building can only be an improvement. Overall, I think you're being a bit hard on the Med City. First, many of our larger buildings are somewhat utilitarian. The Gonda Building, for example, is a clinical building meant for patient care. That said, considering the purpose, I think it's quite lovely. Want more evidence of a quality skyline? The Plummer Building comes with bona fide 1920s Art Deco style. Broadway Plaza tops off at 29 stories tall. The space-age Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Building is both energy efficient and stylistically forward. But for a bit more context, I reached out to Chris Osmundson, director at Onward Investors, to discuss why tall buildings are not a priority in Rochester. Osmundson said it all comes down to the differences between Type III and Type I construction. Type III — "lumber typically over a pre-cast concrete podium" — can only be built up to 75 feet, up to seven stories. Just one more story would require a different, and much more expensive, construction type. Type I — post-tension concrete — can be build taller, but at a 35% increase in costs per floor. Examples of Type I construction in Rochester would be The Berkman. And while that building got built at 11 stories, it also came with $10.5 million in tax-increment financing funding. Then there's the matter of rents. No one is probably going to pay the rents that would make such a tall building profitable — especially at today's construction prices — in Rochester. "The taller projects that are working to get done or have gotten done in Rochester are trophy assets trying to command rents that they can only get from a small percentage of the population, and also need significant subsidy," Osmundson said. So, dream all you like about a one-third scale model of the Taipei 101 tower (good luck building something so tall and heavy atop our karst geology) in downtown Rochester, but my guess is nothing in the next 10 years will top Broadway Plaza. And, considering how I feel about Rochester's current skyline, Answer Man is OK with that. Send questions to Answer Man at answerman@ .

As incoming superintendent of Byron Public Schools, Nate Walbruch says he plans to stay for the 'long-term'
As incoming superintendent of Byron Public Schools, Nate Walbruch says he plans to stay for the 'long-term'

Yahoo

time04-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

As incoming superintendent of Byron Public Schools, Nate Walbruch says he plans to stay for the 'long-term'

May 4—BYRON, Minn. — Despite the challenges facing the district, Nate Walbruch is confident he can help Byron Public Schools regain its footing as he gets ready to take the helm as the incoming superintendent — a role he plans to hold for the foreseeable future. Walbruch accepted the position in April and will officially step into the role in July. He will have to hit the ground running as the district prepares to hold another referendum to ask residents to increase their tax contribution with an operating levy, while also helping to rebuild trust between the district and the community it serves. It will be a situation similar to one he's already experienced at the district he currently leads: Howard Lake-Waverly-Winsted west of the Twin Cities. "When I arrived at HLWW, the district found itself in some very difficult financial situations," Walbruch said. "I felt like Byron really matched the kind of situation that I could bring something to." In November, Byron voters rejected a request for more funding for the school system, leaving district leaders with the task of having to make more than $1 million in budget cuts. It also left the district with the renewed task of convincing voters that investing in the school system is the right decision and that they can trust the district leaders who are proposing it. During his final interview, the Byron School Board asked Walbruch what his plan would be for another referendum. In response, he spent 20 minutes talking about how he would help the district navigate the process. "I can appreciate that the public has a lot of questions about the state of the district," Walbruch told the Post Bulletin. "Job one is going to be working with the community leadership and community members to reestablish trust." The Byron School Board offered him the role after an extended discussion and a split vote about whether he was the right candidate for the position. Byron's current superintendent, Mike Neubeck, announced in December that he would resign in June. The School Board spent part of that discussion on rumors that had spread about Walbruch — including those in an anonymous email sent to the district that the board members found to be unsubstantiated. "There was nothing to those accusations in the email," School Board member Alisha Eiken said during the discussion about whether to offer Walbruch the position. Board member Kelli Crary commented on the situation as well, pointing out the broader context in which it was rooted. "I think it's noteworthy as well that a lot of the allegations are at a specific school that happened to be during COVID," she said. "I think a lot of schools had issues during COVID." An independent source outside the Byron School Board also confirmed to the Post Bulletin that the accusations in the email submitted to the school board were unfounded. Another part of the board's discussion was about whether Walbruch would be with the district long enough to make a difference. Walbruch has been the superintendent of Howard Lake Waverly-Winsted since 2023. Prior to that, he was the principal of Rochester's Century High School from 2021-23, and the principal of Plainview-Elgin-Millville High School from 2016-21. Minnesota law requires school districts to renegotiate contracts with their superintendents every three years, and the relatively high turnover rate of superintendents is not uncommon. Originally from Rochester and a graduate of Mayo High School, the role in Byron will bring Walbruch closer to home. In addition to Byron, he also had interviewed for the role of superintendent at the neighboring district of Kasson-Mantorville. Walbruch's current district has a student population of 1,312, Byron Public Schools has a student population of 2,342. He described Byron as being "big enough to have the flexibility to do some unique things" while also being small enough that he can know "every staff member and a lot of the students." "My intent for Byron is to stay there for the long-term," Walbruch told the Post Bulletin. "I want to not only help guide the district through its current struggles and put it on stable footing, but also help it make a plan for what comes next."

Two Post Bulletin reporters receive AHCJ fellowship, embark on firearm violence reporting project
Two Post Bulletin reporters receive AHCJ fellowship, embark on firearm violence reporting project

Yahoo

time25-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Two Post Bulletin reporters receive AHCJ fellowship, embark on firearm violence reporting project

Apr. 24—ROCHESTER — The Association of Health Care Journalists has chosen Post Bulletin reporters Dené K. Dryden and Olivia Estright as 2025 Firearm Violence Reporting Fellows. The fellowship, sponsored by The Joyce Foundation, provides resources, mentorship and financial support to a handful of journalists in the Great Lakes region as they embark on monthslong reporting projects focused on gun violence. Dryden and Estright are two of five journalists in the fellowship's inaugural class. Through this fellowship, Dryden and Estright will produce stories that measure the impact of firearm injuries and deaths among children in Southeast Minnesota and across the state. Dryden is the Post Bulletin's health reporter. She has worked at the Post Bulletin since August 2022 and has been an AHCJ member since March 2023. Estright is the Post Bulletin's public safety reporter. She joined the Post Bulletin newsroom in June 2024. Have you or someone you know been directly affected by a child's death or injury due to a firearm? Are you a Minnesotan who is deeply involved in gun safety advocacy? Do you provide services, including medical care, for those who have been physically or mentally harmed by gun violence? We want to hear from you. Fill out this Google Form to get in touch.

EDITORIAL: A positive step to help promote small, family-owned farms
EDITORIAL: A positive step to help promote small, family-owned farms

Yahoo

time19-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

EDITORIAL: A positive step to help promote small, family-owned farms

Apr. 19—Some pictures really are worth 1,000 words. For example, we'd point to a photograph taken April 7 by former Post Bulletin reporter Noah Fish, who now works for Agweek. The photo (you can it find online easily enough) shows Tony Lent and Allie Kuppenbender on their farm in Mazeppa. Also in the photo are the couple's children, Otto, 4, and Aurora, 6 months. If you want to believe that family farming has a future in Minnesota, then this photo gives you reason for hope — but this family, like a lot of other young farmers, needs some help. Lent and Kuppenbender don't plant hundreds of acres of corn and soybeans. They don't milk 500 cows. They don't have containment buildings filled with hogs or feedlots packed with steers. Their farm, Bleed Heart Floral Farm & Design, operates on just 14 acres. They derive the bulk of their family's income from just 2 acres, on which they grow a variety of flowers. They sell cut flowers wholesale, provide arrangements for weddings and other social events, and also offer a subscription-based service of fresh, seasonal bouquets. These young farmers battle many of the same elements that crop farmers face, including unpredictable weather, weeds, insects and other pests, but they lack some of the built-in advantages that bigger, more conventional agricultural operations enjoy. Sen. Steve Drazkowski, a Republican from Mazeppa, and Sen. Aric Putnam, a DFLer from St. Cloud, are teaming up to help level the playing field for farmers like Lent and Kuppenbender. They have co-authored a bill that would qualify flower farms for agricultural classification. Why is such a change needed? Currently, Minnesota's tax code doesn't consider cut flowers as an agricultural product along the lines of soybeans, poultry or even tree seedlings. This means Lent and Kuppenbender pay property taxes on their farmland at the much-higher residential rate, and the process of erecting even basic farm buildings is more permit-burdened and costly than it would be for a turkey farmer who needs a new pole shed. The mere fact that a Republican and a DFLer have united in an effort to update the tax code is strong proof that this change is needed. Bipartisanship in St. Paul is only slightly more common than an orchid blooming outdoors at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum in January, so Drazkowski and Putnam deserve full credit for reaching across the partisan divide in an effort to help flower farmers. We urge other legislators in our region to join this effort. Would this classification change have a profound, immediate impact on Minnesota's economy? Probably not. Fewer than 300 floriculture farms operate in Minnesota right now, including 10 in Olmsted County, seven in Goodhue County and 19 in Wabasha County. About 80 percent of the cut flowers sold in the U.S. are imported from other nations, and those imports include the relatively few flower varieties that are easily grown, ship well and have a comparatively long shelf life. But just as the "know your food" movement has gained steam, so too has the market for locally produced flowers. More acres in the U.S. are converted to flower production every year, and local growers can offer more delicate, seasonal, region-specific flowers. They can create bouquets and centerpieces that simply can't be found at a supermarket or a major floral chain. Such flowers might be more expensive than blooms harvested in Mexico (tariffs could change that), but the ever-increasing popularity of farmers markets is ample proof that plenty of people are willing to pay a premium for locally-produced agricultural products. We see this trend as an opportunity for young Minnesotans who want to get their hands dirty. Between 2017 and 2022, Minnesota lost 3,300 farm operations. The land involved didn't vanish, of course — it came under new ownership and/or operators. In that same time, the number of farm operations that worked at least 2,000 acres grew by 21 percent. When agricultural acres change hands, newcomers to farming are largely shut out of the market by the high price of land and equipment. Even renting farmland is difficult, because large operations can pay rates that aspiring newcomers can't match. So, if a young couple doesn't inherit 500 acres and a tractor, they face a difficult path to become conventional crop-and-livestock farmers. But there is another path, and that's the one being followed at Bleeding Heart Farm. Lent and Kuppender are living proof that small operations, even less than 10 acres, can survive and potentially thrive by growing labor-intensive, high-value products that they market and sell locally. Young people who want to create careers in farming will have a tough time buying 500 acres — but five acres is doable. Minnesota should do everything possible to encourage such farms. That's not to say we oppose what's happening on Minnesota's vast agricultural landscape. Large farm operations are very adept and efficient producers of meat, livestock feed and the ethanol that fuels our vehicles. Although we look back with some nostalgia at the days when a 160-acre crop-and-livestock farm could support a family of four, those days are gone — and our state's farmland has never been as productive as it is today. But we like the idea that many of the parcels now considered "hobby farms" or "rural acreages" could soon become viable micro-farms that produce organic vegetables, specialty meats and Minnesota-grown flowers that will make beautiful centerpieces for Easter feasts. And if kids like Otto and Aurora grow up on the farm and decide to follow in Mom's and Dad's footsteps, so much the better.

Why Rep. Brad Finstad defends Trump's tariff policy -- to create a more even playing field
Why Rep. Brad Finstad defends Trump's tariff policy -- to create a more even playing field

Yahoo

time17-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Why Rep. Brad Finstad defends Trump's tariff policy -- to create a more even playing field

Apr. 16—ROCHESTER — GOP Congressman Brad Finstad defended President Donald Trump's imposition of tariffs against other countries, arguing that Trump was seeking to address an uneven playing field between the U.S. and other countries that had long been neglected. "There was a shake-up needed to get people back to the table," Finstad said during a 45-minute interview at the Post Bulletin, referring to the sweeping "Liberation Day" tariffs imposed last week on allies and adversaries around the world. The move rattled stock and bond markets. Finstad defended the use of tariffs against U.S. allies and trading partners, because it showed that the U.S. was serious about addressing barriers to trade that other countries had erected against the U.S. "There was a need to get the Philippines, South Korea and Vietnam to the table," Finstad said. "If you looked at the tariffs, it was not an even playing field. So the tariff decisions he made on that day, he had 70 some countries reach out to him. He's at 15 deals on the table right now." Finstad said that it would behoove the Trump administration to lock in those deals as quickly as possible to show progress, given the disruption and uncertainty the tariffs had created. During the interview, Finstad was asked about the uneven application of Trump's tariffs and the uneven playing field it had created among domestic businesses. Soon after its "Liberation Day" announcement, the Trump administration exempted smartphones and semiconductors from the "reciprocal tariffs" it had announced. Its effect was to make it easier for a trillion-dollar company like Apple and other high-tech firms to import their products from China than it is for a small businesswoman from Oronoco to bring baby products manufactured in China into the U.S. Finstad said the question raised a bigger issue that "we don't make things in this country anymore that we have become reliant on." "What are we doing as a country from a national security perspective to make sure that we still can do some of these things — whether it's pharmaceuticals, whether it's vitamins for our animal feed?" Finstad said. "We have put ourselves in a 20-year slump where we don't know how to produce that anymore. So there is a bigger conversation that has to happen about, 'How did we get to this point?'" Some have argued that the U.S. is largely abandoning its leadership role in creating a world of rules-based globalization and free trade. The U.S. was viewed as the envy of the world in terms of economic growth compared to other developed countries. Why was it necessary to deliver the "shock therapy," as his regime of tariffs have been characterized, to the world economy and risk the possibility of recession, when the U.S. was faring well? Finstad said that narrative ignores and obscures U.S. weakness in other areas, such as manufacturing and the federal debt. He said there were national security reasons for the U.S. to reshore some manufacturing and mining activity, whether it's chips, critical minerals or energy. "When you look at our place in the global world, yes, you can look at different metrics and how to measure that. But for right or wrong, our adversaries see us as a weak manufacturing country that couldn't uptick our munitions production. That we don't have the financial backbone or wherewithal because of our $36 trillion in debt to sustain some sort of military conflict," he said. Asked about efforts to pass the president's "big, beautiful bill" that would extend tax cuts and bolster the border and military, Finstad did not sound sanguine. "It's going to be a heavy lift," Finstad said. Republicans, who control both the House and Senate, are struggling to reconcile the chambers' respective blueprints. The House has far more spending cuts than does the Senate in its version. And there are other red lines that could snarl up a final resolution. "Shame on every elected official, Republican and Democrat, if we don't pass (a tax bill)," Finstad said. "If we don't, we're going to have the largest tax increase in the history of our country and we're going to do nothing to address our $36 trillion debt." Asked if Finstad would support legislation that would take back Congress's trade authority from the president, he said, "maybe." But he questioned whether Congress as a group could create a coherent trade policy. "If you look at the way Congress operates right now, I don't know how we do it in this climate," Finstad said. Observers of Trump say the president loves chaos, the more the better. Finstad was asked whether he believed that was true. "I don't know if I'd say chaos. I think he loves speed. I don't think he sits still. And because of that pace and that constant movement, it appears to be chaotic. It might feel like chaos but it's just speed," Finstad said.

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