Northfield’s heroin problem: one year later

Northfield News Managing Editor Jaci Smith’s column in today’s paper is titled Heroin is here and it is a problem.

And one thing I was never completely confident of was the breadth of the “problem.” I could never really get an answer, even after I began working here, on the veracity of Smith’s numbers. He said that as many as 250 young people were abusing opiates in Northfield. I’m pretty confident now that he was right.

Reporters Suzanne Rook, David Henke and I have interviewed dozens of individuals on both sides of the battle: those who either knew of someone or themselves took or sold heroin and OxyContin (a pharmaceutical opiate) and those who were trying to save the abusers. We’ve spoken with medical officials, school officials, state health officials, county health and public safety officials and statisticians.

IMG_7640

Here are the links to the Northfield News ‘Heroin One year later’ series of stories (final six not yet published): 

Here are the links to the drug-related blog posts and podcasts we’ve done here on Locally Grown in the past year:

Photo album: 4th of July

Yesterday was a picture-perfect hometown 4th. See the photos of the kiddie parade, kids carnival, kids dance, criterium bike race, vintage baseball (thanks to Susan Hvistendahl), rock bands, and fireworks from the footbridge.

See the album of 100+ photos or this slideshow:

Drugged, sliced, and bound: day surgery at the Northfield Hospital

nfld-hosp-logo

I saw Northfield Hospital emperor Ken Bank this morning (we were both loading up on drugs at GBM) and told him I was going to blog my surgery experience yesterday at his house of pain. Not to worry, I told him. The staff who I had contact with were terrific.

It started the moment I walked into the Day Surgery unit at 6 am and met the nurse, Laurie LaMoore (from Cannon Falls, I later learned). After I changed into one of those flattering hospital gowns, she noticed I was cold and brought me a heated blanket. Heated! I should have asked for a hot toddy, now that I think of it.

Then anesthesiologist Jim Moy arrived and he spent probably 20 minutes carefully explaining all the details and rationale for everything he was about to do. It included a story of his own rotator cuff surgery, which I really appreciated. (His injury, like mine, can legitimately be blamed on our offspring.)

Since I have two shoulders, but only one in need of repair, every subsequent staffer I met subjected me to a line of questions, eg: who are you, why are you here, what’s your address, which shoulder, etc.  All that, of course, to prevent surgical debacles like removing the wrong kidney. It was reassuring to know that these folks were following the guidelines to the T.

shepleys I saw my surgeon, Bob Shepley (shown here with some babe he picked up at the Governor’s Ball) just before I faded into the sunset. Bob did my ACL a few years back and since that worked out well, I thought I give him some repeat business. My sweetie was there to greet me in recovery (she also had great things to say about the staff) and I was on my way home in a shoulder sling strapped to my body before noon. Piece o’ cake.

After a long nap, Robbie and I went to see Wall-E at the Southgate (hilarious). I hit the sack around midnight as the surgical block was wearing off (at the precise time Jim Moy predicted). A bag of ice and a Tylenol got me through the night and I was back blogging at my corner office at 6 am.

I do feel a nap coming on, tho. I better get one in before the kiddie parade begins. Photo duty left-handed today.

Ben Witt and Milltown Cycles: two blogs and a 4th of July Criterium race in downtown Northfield

Ben WittBenWitt-blog-sshot 07nofo

Northfielder Ben Witt stopped by my corner office this morning. Ben’s the owner of Milltown Cycles in Faribault, has both a Milltown Cyles blog and a Milltown Cycles 4th of July Criterium blog. The Crit is the bike race that’s been held in downtown Northfield for the past few years on the 4th. He’s the main man for it.

Situated in historic downtown Northfield, this race will challenge not only your stamina, but your technical ability as well. With fast paced sharp corners, a technical split up hill, and a perfect set up for a sprint finish, the course appeals to many types of riders. With a full day of racing including a small parade and kids race, there’s something for everyone. The city of Northfield also comes alive with food vendors, live music, and historical tours of the famous Jesse James raid.

Billboard company whacks Rice County Commissioners with billboard, website

Galen-Malecha District 2 Rice County Board member Galen Malecha phoned me Wed. night, alerting me to a billboard on I-35 at the Rice/Scott county line and a web site called RiceCoJobs.com.

Attorney Clinton McLagon is a business partner for an outdoor advertising company, according to the Thursday edition of the Faribault Daily News which has a story on the issue titled, Sign questions local leaders. McLagon…

… approached the Rice County planning and zoning commission April 22 on behalf of three Rice County residents to look at changing the zoning ordinances for the land between County Road 1 and Highway 19.

… McLagan said businesses are leaving urban areas and having billboards is a way to attract them to more rural areas. He said those who petitioned would be compensated for use of their land for the billboards. “We had a petition to change the definition in the zoning ordinance to allow billboards on some of the properties,” he said. “It would give them the opportunity to develop their land in the future.”

… At a May 20 work session, the commissioners agreed not to look into changing the zoning ordinances to allow billboards at that time.

There is a national company called Interstate Outdoor Advertising but the RiceCoJobs.com web site spells it “Interstate Outdoor Advertizing LLC” with the same address as McLagon.  The photo on the site has been doctored to make it look like it’s a photo of the one on I35. The Fbo paper’s web site has an actual photo.

Audio: Fireworks at the Special City Council meeting

I used my digital voice recorder to capture the audio while watching last night’s NTV’s showing of the Wed. night special city council meeting (agenda PDF photo is from earlier this year).

Northfield City Council

(The audio throughout the meeting was crappy so don’t blame me and my home electronics. Remind me to blog separately about why, after spending tens of thousands of dollars on council chambers technology, we can’t get good audio. AAARRRGGGHHH!)


Click play to listen. 1 hour 36 minutes. Or download the MP3.

LWV Observer Jane McWilliams has blogged her report of the meeting, so be sure to read that before commenting here.

Regarding the logistics of the meeting, Jane noted:

Two resolutions were distributed at the meeting (and not prior to that time, as far as the League observer was able to determine), as well as an unsigned memo attached to the curriculum vitae of Richard F. Fursman. The observer commented during the public comments that it was unfortunate for both the public and the members of the council that the materials hadn’t been made available prior to the meeting. It made consideration of the very difficult issues more difficult.

Listen to Jane’s comments at the 8 min 20 sec mark. I agree with her. The City had 3 full days to get the resolutions on the meeting’s web page. And they’re still not there. Roger Knutson, the special counsel at the meeting, didn’t even bring a copy of Roder’s employment contract to the meeting. Shouldn’t he have been prepared?

After the Council accepted his resignation, City Administrator Al Roder read a statement (13 min 30 sec mark) blasting Mayor Lee Lansing for his treatment of Roder during his tenure. He then asked that the Council pay him 6 months severance along with $6,200 of attorney fees beyond the $7,500 that they agreed to pay. Jane wrote:

Before the council began their discussion, Roder spoke frankly about the conflicts he had had with Mayor Lansing, who, Roder said, asked him to resign in March 2007. On the basis of that request, Roder said he is due severance pay at his departure. He asserted he had been subject to abusive treatment by Lansing. He said his desire is to move on with his career. He said his ability to negotiate salary advancement in a new position has been eroded by allegations, and that he is making a lateral move at a financial cost to himself and his family.

After council discussion, the public was allowed to comment (listen at the 42 min. mark). Charter Commission members Bill Beck and Victor Summa (speaking as citizens) both blasted the Council (among other things) for their willingness to even consider paying Roder severance. Beck threatened to file a lawsuit. Councilor Davis tangled with Beck, arguing that severance was not on the agenda.

During the final public comment period:

  • Don McGee spoke at the 1 hr 12 min mark
  • Former councilor Dixon Bond spoke at the 1 hr 14 min mark
  • Jane McWilliams spoke at the 1 hr 16 min mark
  • Victor Summa spoke at the 1 hr 18 min mark
  • Kiffi Summa spoke at the 1 hr 20 min mark

During the final wrap-up comments:

  • Councilor Davis took issue with McGee’s criticism that the Council needed a good job description for City Admin, blasting Lansing indirectly. He also took issue with Jane McWilliams (and others) about how the meeting was scheduled (1 hr 24 min mark).
  • Councilor Denison defended the rationale for calling the meeting and how it was handled (1 hr 28 min mark) and blasted Kiffi Summa for her ongoing criticisms of him.
  • Councilor Pokorney commented that he’d love to write a book about the whole experience (1 hr 31 min mark).

RepJ reporter hired; Bonnie Obremski arrives in Northfield next week

repjlogo-thumb1 Bonnie Obremski

Our Representative Journalism colleagues have hired the first journalist for the project, Bonnie Obremski. She’s packing up her stuff in North Adams, Massachusetts where’s she been a news reporter for the The North Adams Transcript the past two years. After a cross-country drive, she’ll arrive in Northfield sometime early next week. We hope to have her on next week’s podcast.

See all our RepJ-related blog posts for more.

Gospel Gossip to go on national tour this summer

Gospel GossipSarah Nienaber and Justin Plank

I chatted with Northfielder Justin Plank this morning at the Blue Monday. Justin is the bass player for Gospel Gossip which performed at the JuneBug 2008 Music Festival on Saturday.

Justin Plank Sarah Nienaber Ollie Moltaji

Left: Justin Plank
Center: Sarah Nienaber
Right: Ollie Moltaji

Justin told me that they’ll be leaving on a 40-day/25 gig tour of the U.S. in early August. On Aug 8-9, they’ll be one of 15 ‘college bands’  invited to perform/compete at the New American Music Festival in PA where Bob Dylan, the Raconteurs, the Roots, Gnarls Barkley and Spoon will headline.

They sounded different to me at JuneBug than when they played at the Cow last December (blogged here on LG by Ross). Justin said that they rarely perform any of the tracks from their first CD anymore. He said they’re working on a new CD and are maybe 3/4 of the way there.

Keep track of them on their Gospel Gossip website and their Gospel Gossip MySpace page.

Podcast #100: The Triumvirate opines about city, school board, and county races

Locally Grown cookie with candle Locally Grown cookie 

We celebrated the 100th podcast episode of Locally Grown today with a cookie and a candle (okay, a match) and then later, ceremoniously crumbled it over a beer. Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Freakin’-Dah, eh?

We then launched into a discussion about who’s running and who ain’t for City Council, Mayor, School Board, and County Board.

Click play to listen. 30 minutes. You can also subscribe to the podcast feed, or subscribe directly with iTunes. Our radio show/podcast, Locally Grown, usually airs Wednesdays at 5:30 PM on KYMN 1080 AM.

Changing Gears in Northfield

I got this email yesterday from Joe Pahr, Advisor and Social Studies Specialist at ARTech:

Today I met Andy Davis of Changing Gears.  He and his fiancee, Melissa, had stopped at Blue Monday on their way from Bloomington, Indiana to San Francisco by bicycle.  Along the way they are filming a documentary about communities and organizations that are working towards sustainable living practices.  We had quite a discussion about what is happening in Northfield…

Tomorrow, Wednesday, I am meeting them at ARTech to do an interview about the school’s solar project.  At least one of the students involved in the project will be there.  You are welcome to join us.  Andy and Melissa will be in town at least until tomorrow afternoon.  Also, I pointed out Griff’s table at Blue Monday and told them to introduce themselves. On a related note, this morning I met Anders Forselius who is cycling around the world from his native Sweden.  His website is  He hopes to be in Beijing for the Summer Olympics. All roads truly lead to Northfield.

Andy Davis and Melissa of Changing Gears

Andy and Melissa did stop by my corner office at GBM this morning. We chatted about Northfield’s civic blogosphere and citizen engagement… and our mutual history with Utne Salons.

I’m hoping they stick around till this afternoon to catch our podcast recording session and maybe a beer at the Cow afterwards.

They blogged the first day of their visit to Northfield. I expect they’ll have another post in a day or two.’

11:30am update: Andy and Melissa stayed in Bruce Anderson’s backyard last night. Bruce blogged them.

Video: The Zillionaires at JuneBug 2008

I took this videoclip of The Zillionaires playing at JuneBug night #3 on Saturday. I panned the crowd a bit, too.

Click play to watch. 2 min 30 sec.

Audio: Northfield Police Chief Mark Taylor at the NDDC Downtown Forum

Northfield Police Chief Mark Taylor Nfld PD Organization chart

The NDDC’s July Downtown Forum featured Northfield Police Chief Mark Taylor yesterday morning a the Archer House.  I captured the audio of his presentation and most of the Q&A. He handed out the department organization chart (right photo).

Click play to listen. 50 minutes.

Locally Grown site traffic report for June

Locally Grown site traffic report for June

LoGroNo (Locally Grown Northfield) traffic for June was up over the previous month, according to Google Analytics:

  • Visits: 21,788. Previous: 19,811 (+9.98%)
  • Absolute Unique Visitors: 6,556. Previous: 6,236 (+5.13%)
  • Pageviews: 56,099. Previous: 47,982 (+16.92%)

I think those are all-time highs for visits and pageviews. All-time high for unique visitors was 6,927 in April.

#1 blog post for June: 6/2 City Council meeting - what happened? with 3,478 Pageviews, 2,661 Unique.

Participation:

Number of people commenting during the month: 122. Previous: 124

Number of comments posted during the month: 931. Previous: 899

‘Name that Neighborhood’ and become part of Northfield’s history and maybe a Google map

  Michele Merxbauer IMG_6798

Michele ‘Mitch’ Merxbauer, head honcho of the City of Northfield’s Housing & Redevelopment Division, has launched a contest to Name That Neighborhood.

Which one?  The same one she talked about on a LoGroNo podcast back in late Feb this year.

Southbridge IISouthbridge II
The HRA has secured 14 acres southeast of the soccer complex (near the Southbridge Development) where it will create approximately 60 units of ownership housing, targeted as starter homes, workforce housing and down-sized homes for empty-nesters. Move/zoom this Google Map for additional perspective on the neighborhood’s location.


View Larger Map

Mitch wrote in a blog post on N.org:

The neighborhood name will be used on all documents and advertising for the neighborhood. Creativity, incorporation of green or sustainable ideas, healthy living and inclusiveness are all elements in a name we hope to see from the community.

The deadline for submitting entries has been extended to July 10, 4:30 pm because all the entries submitted thus far evidently suck. I read that on the internet, I’m pretty sure.

You can submit your entries right to Mitch via email or stop by her office at City Hall and fill out a form.

HOWEVER…

In true LoGroNo fashion, I think it’ll be more fun to submit your entries here in public via a comment to this blog post since one idea can trigger another. Hopefully, you’ll get your idea submitted before Mr. Listeria, Brendon Etter, takes all the good ones.

horse-apples 
My first submission: Horse Apple Acres. It meets all the criteria: creativity (of course), sustainable (duh), healthy living (riding horses), inclusiveness (4-legged creatures).

First National Bank of Northfield’s drive-up gets a makeover; rift with NHS to be healed

First National Bank of Northfield's drive-up facility The First National Bank of Northfield’s drive-up facility at 529 Division has a new paint job to go along with their new sign/logo/corporate makeover at the hands of Dave Neuger and staff at Neuger Communications Group.

You can compare this new drive-up look to the old look by looking at our Sept. 7, 2007 blog post when the Northfield Historical Society (NHS) filed a protest against the bank.

The rift has been healed, I’m happy to report. An agreement was reached for the bank to keep the historically-valuable previous photo of the drive-up facility on the bank’s locations web page until Dave Shumway retires. I checked this afternoon and the bank is keeping its word thus far.