OFFRE D'UNE DURÉE LIMITÉE | Obtenez 3 mois à 0.99 $ par mois

14.95 $/mois par la suite. Des conditions s'appliquent.
Page de couverture de Minneapolis Pulse: Immigration Enforcement Tensions, City Updates, Community Resilience

Minneapolis Pulse: Immigration Enforcement Tensions, City Updates, Community Resilience

Minneapolis Pulse: Immigration Enforcement Tensions, City Updates, Community Resilience

Écouter gratuitement

Voir les détails du balado

À propos de cet audio

Good morning, this is Minneapolis Local Pulse for Friday, January 16. We start with breaking developments shaking our city from the ongoing federal immigration enforcement. A federal judge just ordered the release of Garrison Gibson, a Liberian man whose home near Lake Street was raided by heavily armed agents using a battering ram four days ago, with his wife and nine-year-old child inside. The judge ruled it violated his Fourth Amendment rights, no proper warrant in hand. Meanwhile, tensions boil after last week's fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good by ICE agents, a man shot in the leg Wednesday after attacking an officer with a shovel and broom near Chicago Avenue, and a U.S. citizen woman dragged from her car en route to a brain injury clinic downtown. Our state, with Minneapolis and St. Paul, sued the feds to halt the surge of over two thousand officers, while President Trump threatens the Insurrection Act amid protests. Mayor Frey calls it unsustainable, and unions rally for a one-day general strike next Friday, January 23, to push back.

Shifting to city hall, that lawsuit underscores fights over daily safety and rights, keeping neighborhoods on edge. On jobs, our market stays competitive but strong in healthcare like nursing and therapy roles, with Monster reports highlighting about 600,000 hires nationwide last year, many skill-based spots here too. Real estate holds steady amid uncertainty, no big swings reported.

Weather today brings light snow flurries around Nicollet Mall, impacting commutes but clearing by afternoon, highs near 25 degrees, so bundle up for events.

New activity buzzes with Mia's silver treasures exhibit opening at 2400 Third Avenue South, and Fine Line's Dolly Parton tribute tonight at 318 North First Avenue. Tomorrow, free family music at MacPhail Center on South Second Street, Art Shanty Projects on Lake Harriet, and Sibelius with the Minnesota Orchestra at Orchestra Hall. Mark January 20 for the virtual National Day of Racial Healing.

Quick school note: Local teams notched wins in recent hoops, boosting spirits. Crime in the last day stays tied to those ICE incidents, no new major alerts, but stay vigilant.

For a feel-good lift, community whistle networks are forming, like nurse Monica Bicking's efforts near homeless shelters, protecting neighbors house by house.

Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and remember to subscribe. 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 quietplease.ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Pas encore de commentaire