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MAKING CONNECTIONSMAKING CONNECTIONS
Have white people and Latinos as communities made the connections that let them do more than live side by side around the state?
RURAL HEALTH CARERURAL HEALTH CARE
Minnesota's rural health care system is under pressure from many sides. Communities are trying new ways to deal with doctor shortages and financial pressure on small hospitals.
THE PRICE OF SAFETY
THE PRICE OF SAFETY
Tight budgets, changing populations, new technology and even new attitudes are making communities in outstate Minnesota change their approach to safety, security and the law
GETTING THERE
GETTING THERE
For many outstate Minnesota residents, getting around is tougher than it used to be. Communities are coming up with solutions to cope with a changing transportation landscape.
ENTREPRENEURSHIPONE JOB AT A TIME
Minnesota communities look for ways to foster small businesses in an effort to grow the economy one job at a time. Facing economic uncertainty, entrepreneurs get creative.
BROADBANDBROADBAND
High-speed Internet access in rural Minnesota can lead to economic, educational and health-care opportunities. Yet building these networks has been difficult.
FORCED TO CHOOSEFORCED TO CHOOSE
The ax or the tax? The question before communities in Minnesota as a tougher government spending environment plays out against a backdrop of a struggling economy.
HUNGERHUNGER
For one in 10 Minnesotans, getting enough to eat is sometimes a problem. Many experience the anxiety that comes with not always knowing where they will find their next meal.
LOCAL FOODLOCAL FOOD
For decades, Minnesotans have nursed a growing interest in eating locally. But can this movement become big and efficient enough to move into the mainstream?
CENTRAL MINNESOTA 2035CENTRAL MINNESOTA 2035
Residents of five counties in central Minnesota are trying to determine what they want their region to look like two decades from now.
RURAL HEALTH CARERURAL HEALTH CARE

Rural Minnesota retools health care in wave of hospital mergers

a new round of consolidations that can add services to communities and let patients stay closer to home but that inevitably lead to the loss of local control.
ENTREPRENEURSHIPONE JOB AT A TIME

Job challenge: Grow more entrepreneurs

From the Iron Range to Winona to Montevideo, Minnesota communities increasingly talk of fostering an entrepreneurial culture to create jobs, to attract people, to enrich lives.
BROADBANDBROADBAND

Broadband projects take a bumpy ride

Nearly two years after more than $200 million in federal stimulus money was awarded to 18 Minnesota broadband projects some efforts to extend access have been delayed.
FORCED TO CHOOSEFORCED TO CHOOSE

Communities raise taxes, cut jobs

Tax hikes and job cuts are two main themes emerging from recent trends and decisions Minnesota's 3,200 cities, counties, townships and school districts have been making.
HUNGERHUNGER

Hunger plagues the young and homeless

We take a look at how food can become a main problem for young people without homes — and how they learn to survive, as some have to resort to their own survival skills to get by.
LOCAL FOODLOCAL FOOD

Retail grocers compete for local food

Increasing consumer interest in local food has meant that smaller grocers have to compete with retail giants like Walmart for locally produced food.
GETTING THERE
GETTING THERE

High tech transit emerging in the woods

Increasing demand and uncertain budgets have rural Minnesota transit systems looking to combine technology and personal service to become more efficient.

Ground Level is an MPR News project providing news coverage, resources, connections and conversations on important topics in Minnesota communities.

Bigness doesn't always trump in broadband


Looking for the voice of rural Minnesota


Microlender Kiva arrives in Minnesota


The steadily growing number of topic pages you can find here is to give you insight in ways that inform and enlighten and let you see opportunities to take action.

Have white people and Latinos as communities made the connections that let them do more than live side by side? Minnesota's rural health care system is under new pressure from national reform and from demographic and economic changes. Communities are trying new ways to deal with doctor shortages and with financial pressure on small hospitals. Tight budgets, changing populations, new technology and even new attitudes are making communities in outstate Minnesota change their approach to safety, security and the law For years, rural residents have wrung their hands about the loss of young people heading for the big city. University of Minnesota research points to a more nuanced trend of people in their 30s and 40s from urban to rural areas. Communities are coming up with solutions to cope with the changing transportation landscape. For many outstate Minnesota residents, getting to work, to the doctor, to the grocery store and elsewhere is tougher than it used to be. Central Minnesota 2035Residents of five counties in central Minnesota are trying to determine what they want their region to look like two decades from now

 

The ax or the tax? That's increasingly the question before cities, schools and counties in Minnesota as a tougher government spending environment plays out against a backdrop of a struggling economy.

 

Minnesotans are finding new ways to tackle water pollution in their communities, forming collaborations, testing farming techniques, requiring property owners to take steps and turning to technology to help matters.

 

High-speed Internet access in rural Minnesota can lead to economic, educational and health-care opportunities. Yet building these networks has been difficult and even controversial for some. Minnesota communities look for ways to foster small businesses in an effort to grow the economy one job at a time. For one in 10 Minnesotans, getting enough to eat is sometimes a problem. Some go to extreme lengths to consume enough food and most experience the anxiety that comes with not always knowing where they will find their next meal.

 

Under the greatest budget pressure in years, Minnesota cities are both trimming what they do and exploring new ways to provide services.

 

Like many communities in the "collar" around the Twin Cities, Baldwin Township in Sherburne County faces choices related to growth, taxes and a future shaped by the housing bust.

 

For decades, Minnesotans have nursed a growing interest in eating locally. But can this movement become big and efficient enough to move into the mainstream?

Todd County has more than its share of elderly people. Will existing networks of family, volunteers and government programs remain strong enough as that proportion grows?

 

The conversation hosted by MPR News' Ground Level and MN Today examining the demands, pitfalls and solutions to an ever increasing transit need.

The second conversation hosted by MPR News' Ground Level project in conjunction with the central Minnesota "Resilient Region" project deals with the availability of affordable housing in the five-county area.

This is the first conversation MPR News' Ground Level project hosted in conjunction with the central Minnesota "Resilient Region" project. It deals with the economic engines of the five-county area.

If your economy depends on clean water, how do you make sure the water stays clean while you take advantage of it?

One of the things made clear in our online chat about farming practices and water pollution was that what people do on the ground in their communities matter. It's also clear in the responses we received from our seven "water panelists" when we asked them about it.

A great conversation on farming practices and water quality with Redwood Falls farmer Bruce Tiffany and water quality director Kris Sigford of the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy ranging from voluntary action that might change farming practices to setting priorities for the state.

As much as any region of Minnesota, the Arrowhead is a complex brew of powerful economic forces, engaging cultural history, new ways of thinking about the environment and changing politics. MPR News and Northlands NewsCenter hosted a forum in April 2011 at the Duluth Radisson, the conversation was hosted by MPR News' Cathy Wurzer.

Ground Level asked nine health care providers to tell us one thing that would make rural health care better in Minnesota.

The president of CenturyLink's midwest region says shareholder demands and fiduciary responsibilities are one reason small, local phone companies often do better that big ones in supplying high-speed Internet access in rural areas.

The Center for Rural Policy and Development in St. Peter, Minn., issued a report on the declining voice of rural Minnesota.

Kiva, a global microlending organization has a new program that is helping a woman launch a small cafe in southwestern Minnesota.

Teaching English to newcomers has come a long way in Minnesota, but schools are trying to find new ways to improve the academic skills of the 65,000 students enrolled in English-learner classes.

"Making Connections" is an MPR News Ground Level project exploring Minnesotans who are forging links between white and Latino communities.

The Daily Circuit hosted Professor Jack Geller, Chuck Hassebrook, executive director of the Center for Rural Affairs in Lincoln, Nebraska, and Jeff Kletscher, mayor of Floodwood, to talk about rural vitality in America.

Assistant Commissioner of Education Elia Dimayuga-Bruggeman raised Latino graduation rates in Sleepy Eye, where she was principal. Now, she's looking to take those efforts statewide.

Gov. Mark Dayton's broadband task force says Minnesota is not on track to meet its goals of high-speed Internet availability for all households by 2015. It is urging a sales tax credit or an income tax exemption to encourage phone, cable and other companies to provide better high-speed access to the Internet in parts of Minnesota.

Brain Gain

We're gathering stories from people who have moved back to rural parts of Minnesota after leaving for school or work, or who have moved to rural Minnesota for the first time as adults. Thanks so much for your contributions.

by Jennifer Vogel, edited by Michael Olson, MPR News

10 transit systems in Minnesota with the largest percentage gains and losses 2007-2011.

Outstate transit ridership rose 12 percent between 2007 and 2011. Outstate Minnesota is thought of as dominated by car travel, and it is. And what's intriguing is that some places, like Montevideo, Wadena, Hibbing and St. Peter, far outstripped the overall rate of increase. Others, like Northfield, Faribault and Nobles County, declined by double-digit percentages.

Graphic by William Lager, MPR News

In an era of high overhead, ever more byzantine regulations and payment models, cuts to Medicaid and Medicare benefits, and large medical systems swallowing independent practices, Rutten Wasson relishes her straight-forward manner of practicing. By Jennifer Vogel, MPR News

Video by Vickie Kettlewell Osakis, Minn.

Carol Ford and Chuck Waibel operate Garden Goddess Greenhouse and sell fresh produce to 20 families all winter. Now they want to expand operations, growing more and acting as a middleman for neighboring farms to reach the growing local food market.

 

 

Video by Molly Bloom, Minnesota Public Radio

With just 3,558 residents, or six people per square mile, Travis County along the South Dakota border is Minnesota's least populated -- and it fits most common definitions of frontier. It can be lonely, so people have come to rely on a far-flung network of agencies and collaborators to serve a population that's also one of the oldest in the state. We looked at how the county copes these challenges as part of our Forced To Choose series.

Photos by Ann Arbor Miller for MPR News

by Molly Bloom, Minnesota Public Radio, Curtis Gilbert, Minnesota Public Radio

On December 15, 2012, over 150 central Minnesota residents gathered to consider what their future should look like.

Hear what residents and business owners think about the Central Minnesota 2035 'Resilient Region' project.

 

If you've heard Jon Foley on MPR News talk shows or seen him give presentations at the University of Minnesota or elsewhere, you've seen him work pretty hard at looking for a middle ground.

He directs the Institute on the Environment at the U and one of his main arguments is that the world needs to look at agriculture in a different way.

 

I went looking for my grandparents in the newly released 1940 Census forms but found my real reward when the face of Ardelle Neufeld, an 80-year-old woman I'd never met, lit up at BB's Diner in Mountain Lake. By Dave Peters, MPR News

 

 

Ground Level launched in early 2010 focusing on a wide variety of topics, from the growing complexity of Minnesota's local food system to cities preparing for new fiscal realities, from exurban growth in Baldwin Township to the quest to expand broadband access across the state. The Ground Level Blog chronicles the wide variety of topics with over 500

 

We identify topics that are significant and complex and that play out uniquely at the local level. We want to explore those issues in which people taking action in their communities make a difference and can serve as guides for others.

Ground Level launched in early 2010 and shines a light on a variety of topics, from the growing complexity of Minnesota's local food system to cities preparing for new fiscal realities, from exurban growth in Baldwin Township to the quest to expand broadband access across the state.

We experiment with coverage on a variety of platforms. This includes text, audio and video online, of course - the Ground Level blog, a series of topics pages and social networking, for example. It also includes on-air coverage, public forums both virtual and real-world and collaboration with community-based media.

Our audience consists of Minnesotans interested in community life, particularly those who are taking an active part in it or helping others do the same. Ground Level is very much an experiment -- in finding ways to learn about and tell stories, in working with other organizations, in walking up to the line between providing insight and advocating specific actions. Our goal is to inform and give people the ability and incentive to engage with their community. We invite your feedback and your ideas, via the blog, twitter at @MPRGroundLevel, phone calls, emails, whatever. Join us.

About the team:

Dave Peters

Dave Peters directs MPR's project on community journalism, looking for ways Minnesota residents are making their towns, cities and neighborhoods better places to live. He joined MPR News in 2009 after more than 30 years as a newspaper and online reporter and editor. Contact Dave

Jennifer Vogel

Jennifer Vogel reports and writes for the Ground Level project, focusing on complex topics that play out in Minnesota's communities and that involve residents getting engaged with the challenges of the day. She is a longtime Twin Cities writer and editor who joined MPR News and Ground Level in January 2010. Contact Jennifer


Bush Foundation

Support for Ground Level is provided
by the Bush Foundation.