Applications are way up and pipeline of diverse new officers signals positive trajectory for police force following years of attrition.
Businesses at George Floyd Square have not held back in their disapproval of the latest pedestrian mall plan for the intersection where Floyd was killed by Minneapolis Police in 2020. The City Council still doesn’t have a plan that satisfies them.
Civil rights activists gathered outside Target's headquarters to call for a boycott of the retailing giant over its decision to phase out its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
The City of Minneapolis has received four applications to redevelop The People’s Way, which was formerly a Speedway gas station at the corner of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue.
Boston University has announced its Center for Antiracist Research (CAR), which was founded in 2020 following the murder of George Floyd, will close on June 30, with founding director Ibram X. Kendi leaving to join Howard University in Washington, D.C.
Minneapolis is implementing its consent decree, prioritizing community trust and transparency over political expediency. Louisville should too.
The property was bought by the city of Minneapolis after the Speedway closed and has been vacant for the past four-and-a-half years.
Some believe in boycoting the company of over its DEI policy change while others say this hurts minority businesses.
Karla Sofía Gascón, the Oscar-nominated lead of the movie “Emilia Pérez,” is apologizing for her old social media posts that denigrated Islam and that called George Floyd “a drug addict.”
With Black History Month starting Feb. 1, organizations around the Twin Cities are plotting exciting, thoughtful programming that will take place throughout the month. Since its origins in 1970 at Kent State University,
The Minneapolis City Council on Thursday voted to approve another hefty legal settlement related to ex-police officer Derek Chauvin.