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Grow with Us Plant Sale!
Get all of your garden needs and help support DFL48! This year, we’re offering you plant cards at both Gerten’s Greenhouses and Garden Center in Inver Grove Heights and Wagner’s Greenhouse in Minneapolis and Bloomington.
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TAG | Lori Swanson
30
Don’t deregulate landline telephone service in Minnesota
Posted by SD48 DFL Communications Team in Attorney General Lori Swanson, Issues, News, Our Candidates & Elected Officials
The following commentary appeared in the StarTribune Wednesday, April 29, 2015:
By: Will Phillips, Shar Knutson and Lori Swanson
Bills to remove pricing, accessibility and service protections should not proceed. People still rely on their home phones.
A man in northern Minnesota struggled to breathe late one night. His wife called 911 from their landline telephone. Because the couple must climb a hill outside their home to get cellphone reception, they fear what might have happened if they had no landline.
An elderly rural woman sends pacemaker readings to her faraway heart doctor using her landline phone. She can’t do this with a cellphone.
A southern Minnesota woman uses her landline phone to operate her medical-alert system. She lives on a fixed income.
These and other Minnesotans — including many senior citizens and rural residents — need and deserve local landline phone service that is accessible, affordable and reliable. (more…)
AG Swanson · deregulation of landline · home telephone · Lori Swanson
13
State needs to make for-profit colleges more transparent
Posted by SD48 DFL Communications Team in Attorney General Lori Swanson, Issues, News, Our Candidates & Elected Officials
The following, authored by Attorney General Lori Swanson, appeared in the StarTribune on March 12, 2015:
The history of American higher education is a tour of enlightened self-regulation. Professors, alumni, parents and students nurtured a higher education system that made our citizens the living pillars of our democracy. Each generation’s children had the opportunity to climb the ladder of economic opportunity.
But things have changed. Billboards, television commercials and radio broadcasts now herald a different culture for higher education, with for-profit colleges purporting to be the vanguard. Let’s look at the results to date.
For-profit colleges enrolled just 12 percent of students but accounted for 44 percent of student loan defaults in 2013 nationwide. The U.S. Department of Education determined that 72 percent of for-profit college graduates earn less than those who drop out of high school. Nearly 90 percent of for-profit graduates have student loans. Taxpayers ultimately pick up the cost of federal loan defaults when these students can’t find jobs.
Some for-profit “career schools” have saddled students with tens of thousands of dollars of loan debt by misrepresenting job placement rates and the transferability of credits, and by enrolling students in programs that will not even qualify them for employment in their field. Seven of the top eight for-profit colleges that receive GI Bill benefits are under investigation by state or federal regulators for deceptive recruiting or other potential law violations, according to a U.S. Senate Report. Attorneys General in over 25 states have sued, settled with, or are investigating for-profit colleges for their recruiting, marketing, enrollment and/or job placement practices.
Against this backdrop, the Attorney General’s office drafted Senate File 696/House File 234, a bill pending at the State Capitol. The measure would give students better information about job placement rates, graduation rates and limitations on credit transferability. In short, a pretty innocent bill that would cost taxpayers no money but would interject some transparency and basic fairness for students.
Yet, the bill faces a steep climb at the Capitol. Few deny that students are getting hurt. Instead, detractors claim that in 2014 the Minnesota Legislature allowed state regulators to largely outsource their oversight of out-of-state online, for-profit colleges to the school’s home state via an “agreement.” The “agreement,” however, was never designed to fix — nor does it fix — the abuses carried out by for-profit schools. It merely is an excuse to protect the industry by claiming that the state cannot regulate how online schools treat Minnesota students.
Nonsense.
The tsunami of student loan debt has crushed the hopes and dreams of far too many young people. Minnesota has a responsibility to defend these students against abuses by for-profit colleges.
State and federal laws require companies that sell securities to inform potential investors of significant information about the company and the investment — including its risks — so that they can make informed judgments about whether to invest. We should require no less for our students. After all, these companies are selling their programs as investments too — investments in young people’s futures.
Attorney General Swanson · for-profit colleges · Lori Swanson · more transparency
5
Inauguration and North Star Ball
Posted by SD48 DFL Communications Team in Events, Issues, News
Today, January 5, 2015, Gov. Mark Dayton, Lt. Gov. Tina Smith, Attorney General Lori Swanson, Secretary of State Steve Simon, and State Auditor Rebecca Otto were sworn in at the Landmark Center in St. Paul.
DFLers will celebrate four more years of progressive leadership Saturday, Jan. 10 at the North Star Ball. The event, which is open to the public, is being held at the Union Depot in St. Paul. Tickets are $25 in advance and $35 at the door. Student tickets are $15.
Attire is everything from blue jeans to black tie. (You might see some flannel in the crowd. . .)
Order your tickets today at http://www.daytoninauguration.org/2015-north-star-ball. Please attend and show your support for our progressive leaders.
2014 inauguration · 2014 North Star Ball · Attorney General Swanson · Gov. Dayton · Lori Swanson · Lt. Gov. Smith · Mark Dayton · Secretary of State Simon · State Auditor Otto · State Auditor Rebecca Otto · Steve Simon · Tina Smith
10
Minnesota a blue beacon in a sea of red
Posted by SD48 DFL Communications Team in Gov. Mark Dayton, News, Our Candidates & Elected Officials, Secretary of State Steve Simon, Sen. Franken, State Auditor Rebecca Otto
With the worst mid-term election since 1928 and Democrats losing races across the nation, the Minnesota DFL met all but one of our goals:
- reelect Gov. Dayton;
- reelect Sen. Franken;
- reelect our congressional delegation;
- reelect Attorney General Lori Swanson
- reelect Auditor Rebecca Otto and
- elect Steve Simon as our next Secretary of State.
For the first time since 1970 – 44 years – the Minnesota elected a DFL Governor and DFL U.S. Senator.
With fewer than 2 million people voting we fell short on our fifth goal, retaining the majority in the Minnesota House. DFL Chairman Ken Martin makes the point that 10 of the 11 seats that the GOP picked up were in Greater Minnesota.
“The GOP message did not resonate with suburban voters who left the gains that the DFL made in 2012 in suburban districts relatively intact,” Martin said. “The DFL’s ability to win in suburban districts in a difficult mid-term election suggests that the GOP is becoming increasingly confined to a rural party. Indeed their inability to compete in the more populous parts of the state has prevented them from winning ANY statewide office since 2006.”
Thank you to everyone for their hard work to elect leaders who will build a better Minnesota and represent our values in Washington, D.C. We look forward to working together to ensure that the DFL is a Party built to win, built to last and that we retake the Minnesota House and go blue for our Democratic presidential candidate in 2016.
2014 election · Al Franken · Attorney General Swanson · DFL Chair Martin · Gov. Dayton · Ken Martin · Lori Swanson · Mark Dayton · Secretary of State Simon · Sen. Franken · State Auditor Otto · State Auditor Rebecca Otto · Steve Simon · U.S. Senate
Yvonne Selcer for HD48A |
Joan Howe-Pullis for HD48B |
Mark Dayton and Tina Smith |
Lori Swanson for Attorney General |
Steve Simon for Secretary of State |
Rebecca Otto for State Auditor |
Al Franken for U.S. Senate |
Sharon Sund for Congress |
Mike Freeman for Hennepin County Attorney |
Eddie Frizell for Hennepin County Sheriff |
Eden Prairie City Council
These seats are non-partisan. No DFL party endorsement has been given.
Mayor Nancy Tyra-Lukens is running unopposed. We believe Ms. Tyra-Lukens has served the people of Eden Prairie well during her tenures as Mayor and deserves another term.
Council Members Kathy Nelson and Sherry Butcher-Wickstrom are running for re-election along with Andrew K. Moller. We believe Ms. Nelson and Ms. Butcher-Wickstrom have also served the people of Eden Prairie well during their terms. And, therefore, deserve another term.
Mr. Moller filed for office, but doesn’t seem to have a campaign website.
Judgeships on the Ballot
At this month’s Third Congressional District Central Committee meeting, many of the judge candidates spoke to the body. CD3 then compiled information from those discussions and researched candidates. We’re including information on those races in our area with more than one candidate.
Associate Justice — Supreme Court 2, John Hancock, Wilhelmina (Mimi) Wright — Judge Wright has a website with an extensive list of DFL supporters including Sharon Sayles-Belton and Karen Thissen. There is no contact information nor website for her opponent. http://wrightforjustice.com/
Associate Justice — Supreme Court 3, Michelle L. MacDonald, David Lillehaug — Judge Lillehaug is a known in the Twin Cities. Please peruse his list of supporters for your information. If you wish to know about his opponent, please do an internet search with her name to find out about her. http://www.justicelillehaug.org/supporters
4th District Court 16 — Bruce Michael Rivers, James A. Moore — Judge Moore did not attend, as he has signed the agreement with the Hennepin County Bar Association to not participate in any partisan activities. His endorsement list is here for your information: http://www.judgejamesmoore.org/endorsements/. Bruce Rivers joined us and spoke about his experience as a criminal defense attorney. He is running a grassroots campaign and does not have a campaign website. He links to his personal law firm website for information: http://www.riverslawyers.com/
4th District Court 43 — Paul Scoggin, Bridget Ann Sullivan — Both of these very engaging candidates joined us last evening and spoke about their backgrounds, personal views and experience that draws them to run for this open seat. Paul Scoggin offers an impressive list of supporters for our information: http://www.scogginforjudge.com/#!supporters/c11vk. Bridget Ann Sullivan also offers an impressive list of supporters http://www.sullivanfor43.com/index.asp?SEC=EA964D88-8CE3-461C-9D27-72FEC4E3292F&Type=B_EV. Both are passionate and dedicated to their craft of advocating for justice.
4th District Court 53, Bev Benson, Chris Ritts — We were joined by both candidates for this open seat. They spoke about their backgrounds, cases they have tried and the passion that drew them to run for this seat. Bev Benson lists many supporters that will give credence to her speech: http://bevbensonforjudge.com/index.asp?SEC=8A65E138-CA67-4B2A-8866-19EF5E058525&Type=B_BASIC Chris Ritts has an informative website that covers his background. http://rittsforjudge.com/
4th District Court 61, Amy Dawson, Bevery J. Aho — We were joined by Amy Dawson, who spoke about her passion, experience and personal drive to serve the needs of justice last evening. Her list of supporters is as extensive as her passion: http://www.amydawsonforjudge.com/ Her opponent is a known GOP activist, GOP state delegate who raised funds for George W. Bush. There are numerous writings online from her if you need more information.
Please look into all these candidates, read about them and make your decisions. Then, call them for a lawn sign and share your information with your friends, neighbors and family. Judges decide many issues in our community and we need to do our due diligence to make property decisions to elect those who share our values.
You can check on the licensure and other basic information of lawyers here.
Sample Ballots
We were able to download sample ballots and mark our endorsed candidates on them. If you’d like to take a completed sample ballot with you when you go to the polls, just click the link for the area you live in.
House District 48A Living in Eden Prairie
House District 48A Living in Minnetonka
2014 elections · 2014 sample ballots · Al Franken · congress · Eddie Frizell · Gov. Dayton · HD48A · HD48B · Hennepin County Attorney · Hennepin County Sheriff · House District 48B · House Districti 48A · Joan Howe-Pullis · Lori Swanson · Mark Dayton · Mike Freeman · Minnesota Attorney General · Minnesota Secretary of State · Minnesota State Auditor · Rep. Selcer · Sharon Sund · State Auditor Rebecca Otto · Steve Simon · Tina Smith · U.S. Senate · Yvonne Selcer