Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce’s annual STEAM summit for students

KIMT 3 News in Rochester MN reports

32 schools from around southern Minnesota took part in the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce’s annual STEAM Summit at the Rochester Community and Technical College (RCTC) on Tuesday, Nov. 18.

The event aims to connect students with businesses and higher education institutions that offer hands on examples of how they can use science, technology, engineering, art and math in their future careers.

Around 2,500 students participated this year getting to learn about subjects like civil engineering, manufacturing, healthcare among others.

Minnesota applies for $1B in rural health care funds to offset Medicaid cuts especially in rural MN

I wrote about the $1 billion application earlier; MPR News takes a deeper look

Minnesota has applied for a share of $50 billion in federal funding for rural health care that was approved by Congress as part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

The Minnesota Department of Health applied for $1 billion over five years. Its 62-page application lays out detailed plans for the funds, including fellowships aimed at getting more medical students training and working in rural areas, adding more telehealth opportunities and providing more preventative care screenings in local venues, such as schools, pharmacies and tribal clinics.

It is in reaction to losing funds in other places…

The Minnesota Hospital Association estimates that the state could lose $2.4 billion in federal health care funding in the first year alone, fiscal year 2028. The MHA also finds that 140,000 Minnesotans on Medicaid could lose their healthcare coverage while another 60,000 Minnesotans will likely drop their ACA health insurance because of the rising costs.

It sounds like the impact could be harder felt in rural Minnesota…

About 30 percent of Minnesotans live in rural areas of the state, where the health care system has been severely strained in recent years.

There’s a shortage of physicians, nurses and other medical professionals, and the number of rural medical clinics and hospitals closing is on the rise. The MDH wrote in its application for the Rural Health Transformation Program funding that 34 out of Minnesota’s 95 rural hospitals are financially distressed, which means they’ve had four or more years of negative operating margins in the past eight years. Just this year, Mayo Clinic Health System announced it was closing six rural clinics in southeast Minnesota.

According to the application, Minnesota’s rural residents on average must travel 64 minutes for medical-surgical care, whereas people in the state’s urban areas travel just 19 minutes on average for care.

Research show that seniors are least apt to use telehealth as assisted living residents followed by nursing home

McKnight Senior Living reports

Residents of assisted living communities and nursing homes have significantly lower odds of using telehealth compared with older adults who use long-term services and supports and live in the community at large, according to a new study. But assisted living residents were more likely to use it than were nursing home residents.

I thought this was interesting because I might have assumed the opposite but…

The study, led by researchers from Indiana University Bloomington and the University of Minnesota, shows that although telehealth offers a promising strategy for improving access to care and health outcomes, where an older adult lives will affect their odds of using it. The findings were published Tuesday in a JAMDA – The Journal of the Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medical Association article in press.

Using data from almost 7,000 participants in the 2021-2022 National Core Indicators-Aging and Disabilities Adult Consumer Survey for LTSS, the researchers found that assisted living residents had 20% lower odds of using telehealth, and nursing home residents had 63% lower odds of using it, compared with their community-dwelling counterparts. Nursing home residents had 54% lower odds of using telehealth than did assisted living residents.

The findings, the authors said, highlight a disparity in telehealth access and delivery across various LTSS settings. The lower use in assisted living communities and nursing homes, they said, may reflect differences in infrastructure, staffing and resident autonomy.

Data center projects in Minnesota are running into issues

The Minnesota Star Tribune reports…

A company has halted two large-scale data center projects in Minnesota, saying the state would take too long to permit backup generators.

Excelsior-based Oppidan has paused work on data centers in North Mankato and the small city of Hampton in Dakota County. While the company is moving ahead with a data center in Apple Valley, the announcement signals that concerns over Minnesota’s regulatory climate will slow an industry that had been poised for explosive growth in Minnesota.

In May, Amazon abandoned plans for a multibillion-dollar data center in Becker after Minnesota utility regulators ruled the company must get a major state permit for power infrastructure to install 250 diesel generators. Amazon cited uncertain development timelines for permitting and other issues for halting the project.

There are varying views on the impacts of data centers in Minnesota…

The influx of data centers has sparked debate over whether the facilities will help or hurt Minnesota’s ambitions for a carbon-free electric grid. Some data center projects have drawn local controversy for their proximity to housespotential water use and secrecy. Backers of data centers say they bring construction jobs, tax revenue and, potentially, lower electric bills for everyone.

The Minnesota Legislature approved a package of ground rules for the burgeoning industry. The laws impose new rules on energy and water consumption and other measures meant to shield utility customers from paying for the costs of supplying power to data centers.

Lawmakers also extended lucrative sales tax exemptions, for computers, servers, software, cooling and energy equipment that were set to expire in 2042. But the Legislature eliminated a smaller subsidy, a tax break on buying electricity.

Those views were represented at a recent public meeting on data centers hosted by the Southern MN Initiative Foundation in North Mankato last week. As were views from various community members…

Data center developers are facing other obstacles in Minnesota. The nonprofit Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy has sued several cities considering data centers, saying they hid information about the projects and approved faulty environmental review. North Mankato officials have also said lack of available water for a data center could be a hurdle for projects in their city.

EVENT Nov 18-20 GovIT Leadership Summit & Symposium at the Mall of America

From the planners...

Bringing Together Government IT Leaders, Innovators, and Visionaries to Promote Transformative Change!

The GOVIT Leadership Summit & Symposium, produced and hosted by the Public Technology Institute, is the can’t miss event for all government IT across the nation. Join us this fall to see where the future of government IT is going!

This Year’s Theme is Navigating Change in Uncertain Times: Let’s Solve Today’s Challenges—Together!

MN schools experience speech pathologist shortage – but telehealth could help

KSTP Channel 5 reports

There is a shortage of speech-language pathologists across the country and in Minnesota.

According to the National Institutes of Health, 1 in 14 kids has had a communication disorder in the past year. The University of Minnesota says it’s working on creative solutions to address the issue.

“It’s really improved his quality of life,” Jessica Weiche said. Her son, 8-year-old Everett Weiche, has been in therapy with a speech-language pathologist since he was a baby and sees an SLP every week at his elementary school in Plymouth.

Emily Aust, president of the Minnesota Speech-Language Hearing Association, said there are districts in Minnesota with openings for SLPs.

And they talk about telehealth as part of the solution…

Becky Ludewig Lulai, director of clinical programs in speech-language pathology at the U of M, said they’re launching telehealth programs in two rural Minnesota school districts.

They have also structured their program to get more graduate students out in schools.

“We have 30 students each getting three external rotations in our programs,” Lulai said.

Communication is essential in school, and students like Everett continue to build on it.

EVENT Nov 13: Let’s Talk About Data Centers and Water Usage in Duluth

This looks like an interesting meeting from Minnesota Women’s Press

Thursday, November 13, 2025 6:30 PM –  8:30 PM CT

Zeitgeist Zinema 1, 222 E Superior St, Duluth, MN 55802

Join us for an in-person viewing of a powerful conversation featuring CURE’s Sarah Mooradian, who will speak on the growing water demands of data centers—why it matters, how it affects rural and urban communities, and what we can do to ensure a more equitable and sustainable future. Don’t miss this critical conversation on technology, water, and justice. Come learn, connect, and be part of the change. Free and open to the public.

 

Minnesota applies for $1 billion for health care support including telehealth

The Minnesota Star Tribune reports

A $1 billion grant to improve rural health care won’t offset the much bigger losses from looming cuts to the federal Medicaid health program, but Minnesota wasn’t going to miss out on its chance for the money.

The state completed its application on time last week for the rural health transformation funding, which President Donald Trump’s administration and congressional Republicans offered to soften the blow of Medicaid cuts. Wisconsin similarly announced its appeal for funding.

“This is a lot of money,” said Diane Rydrych, health policy director for the Minnesota Department of Health. “It’s really significant for Minnesota if we get this grant, but it’s also a really tough time. It’s not going to be sufficient funding to address all needs.”

Next up: an unsettling wait. Minnesota should find out in the next month if it will receive its share.

Each state applied for $200 million per year for five years, but the actual amount could vary. Some have worried Republican-led states could have an advantage, given Trump’s rhetoric against Democrats and actions in Democrat-led cities and states, such as military deployments and immigration crackdowns.

Sonds as if the funding could be used for telehealth…

Other goals in the next five years include an increase in telehealth medical appointments and a 10% reduction in rural Minnesotans who return to hospitals with avoidable problems. Essentia Health employs paramedics who visit with patients and help prevent their hospital readmissions, though it has made cuts to the program.

The federal government billed the funding as one-time support for five years, so Rydrych said the state focused its application on up-front investments that could pay off after the money runs dry. Technology upgrades to boost telemedicine visits were one example.

Broadband is only reason rural reporter can work for MN Star Tribune

The Minnesota Star Tribune has posted a column from reporter, Karen Tolkkinen, out of Clitherall, Minnesota. She is writing about the experience of receiving government food assistance  in the past in reaction to upcoming federal cuts in food assistance. There’s a paragraph that paints a picture on the importance of broadband…

Trust me that it feels much, much better to give than to receive.
We needed food assistance twice for short periods, once before our son was born and once after. Then, when our son was 2, while my husband farmed and repaired tractors, I was able to land a part-time job in my field. When he was 4, I got full-time work. Health insurance ate up such a huge chunk of my paycheck that we went without for a couple of years, but at least my income paid for groceries.
If you live in the Twin Cities, you might not know that Minnesota has been spending tens of millions of dollars to bring broadband across greater Minnesota. That’s the only reason I’m able to write for the Minnesota Star Tribune, where pay and benefits are better than anything I’ve been able to find out here in the hinterlands.

Alternative education options are changing the MN learning landscape

The Dassel Cokato Enterprise Dispatch write about alternative school options in Minnesota, including online learning…

Across Minnesota, a growing number of students are stepping away from traditional public schools and toward alternative education paths — homeschooling,
Post-Secondary Enrollment Options, and online learning. Their reasons range from safety concerns and academic customization to transportation barriers and future career planning. The result is a reshaping of the educational landscape, with public schools facing declining enrollment, funding challenges and a call to evolve.

Online learning is also expanding. The State of Education in Minnesota 2025 report by EdAllies notes that while virtual academies offer flexibility, students in rural or low-income households often lack reliable internet or devices, limiting their ability to participate fully.

They dive into the main alterative options…

Each alternative education model—homeschooling, PSEO, and online school—offers distinct advantages and challenges.

Including online learning…

Online schooling offers self-paced learning, access to niche subjects and the convenience of no daily commute. As ConsumerAffairs reports, many students appreciate the autonomy and breadth of course offerings. Still, online learners must contend with technology access issues, reduced rapport with instructors and a heightened risk of isolation or disengagement.

They recognize the requirements of online schooling..

Online learning demands stable internet and devices, which remain out of reach for some rural and urban households. …

Technology access also plays a role. While ISD 466 has invested in Chromebooks, and availability has increased in recent years, broadband access remains inconsistent in some outlying areas. This limits the viability of full-time online learning for students without stable internet at home.

Rep Ron Kresha speaks up in support of broadband especially for schools

The Brainerd Dispatch ran an opinion piece from Representative Ron Kresha.

State policy must recognize that rural schools deserve the same opportunities as larger districts. That means supporting broadband access, promoting flexible learning options, and ensuring fair funding formulas that reflect the true cost of serving rural students. It also means connecting education directly to local career paths through partnerships with area businesses and technical colleges.

When students in rural Minnesota see a future for themselves close to home, communities thrive. Education is the bridge that keeps our small towns strong and our workforce growing. By continuing to invest in rural schools, we invest in the future of Minnesota itself.

Rep Kresha has been active in the world of broadband for many years. He introduced a bill in 2019 to invest $100 million in broadband. Last year, he introduced a bill (HF1971) that would remove barriers for telecom carriers interested in deploying broadband. He is chair of the MN House Education Finance Committee.

The end of paper checks creates urgency for Digital Inclusion

Digital Lift reports...

The digital world just became less optional. As of September 30, 2025, the federal government has stopped issuing paper checks for benefits like Social Security. Payments are now deposited directly into bank accounts or onto prepaid debit cards – methods that require not only access to financial services but also the ability to navigate online systems.

This is just the latest in a series of policy changes that assume universal internet access. From healthcare enrollment to unemployment benefits, tax filing to student loan repayment, more essential services are now available only online. For many, this is a matter of convenience. For millions of others, it’s an added barrier that deepens existing inequities.

Minnesota State University, Mankato gets advanced wifi for student housing

Broadband Communities reports on tech innovations at Minnesota State University, Mankato…

Terratron, developer of the new U-Square student housing community in Mankato, Minnesota, set a new benchmark for digital living with the installation of a future-ready managed Wi-Fi network, designed by Allbridge and powered by Nomadix.

Recognizing that reliable connectivity is the number one amenity students demand and a critical backbone for PropTech infrastructure, Terratron implemented a secure, property-wide Wi-Fi solution from the earliest stages of planning. The result: seamless digital experiences for all 215 residents who moved in this fall.

“Students expect their housing to deliver more than just a place to live — it must also deliver exceptional digital connectivity,” said Preston Lougheed, Vice President of Operations at Terratron. “By investing in the best possible service, we’re not only exceeding resident expectations but also building long-term reputational and operational value for our properties.”

How can you trust the news source you’re looking at online? Here’s a checklist.

I have been a reference and research librarian. I’ve been a teacher. I was on the board of Twin Cities Daily Planet, an online citizen journalism newspaper, for many years. Information literacy is a top priority for me. When I read an article or report, I look at who wrote, who paid for and who published it. Lately when I’ve been seeing a new type of article – the sponsored article; and now I’m seeing the sponsored article morph into partner content, So. I thought it might be helpful to share a checklist of things I do when reading an article to assess the purpose.

It all starts at the beginning. Does the headline (or social media link) make sense? For example, you see a headline about the Vikings losing and you just watched them win. Seems fishy and might merit some investigation. Here are some things to consider:

  1. Check the date. I have seen old articles reemerge after an online news source upgrades their backend. The article can look new to a news aggregator, such as Google Alert. With timely events, check the time the update was published. Was the game actually over?
  2. Check the publisher. Are you looking at the MN Star Tribune, a Viking superfan blog or have you wandered into a Packer online forum? On a website look at the “about” section to see who they are and what their mission is. For a report or a book, you might look for the funder or sponsor of the work in the same way. Is the book about the Vikings written about a coach with a summer camp and is he (or she) mentioning that camp a lot? Consider their perspective and goal for the article.
  3. Check the type of article or resource you are reading. Not everything in the newspaper is “just the facts ma’am.”
    1. News article: reports on a news event in a timely fashion, generally sticking to the facts
    2. Feature article: a more in-depth article that often includes quotes, context and/or a narrative. They aren’t just sticking to the facts, they use quotes, they use narrative to frame the story
    3. Editorial: is written by the editors of the publication
    4. Letter to the Editor: is a letter written by a reader to the editor often sharing their thoughts, opinions or stories in response to a recently published article.
    5. Op-Ed (Opposite the Editorial page): similar to a letter to the editor but often longer and addresses a topic or issue more broadly. Often submitted by authors who consider themselves experts on that topic; they share their thoughts, opinions or stories.
    6. Sponsored content: paid, promotional content designed to look like part of a publication. I have seen this also labeled as partner content. The “sponsored” or “partner” label is not always prominent. A loose relative to paid content is paid search results. Do a search on Google, especially for something like [Duluth hotel] and you will see the top results are labeled as sponsored.
  4. Check the author. Similar to checking the publisher, you can usually click on their name for the publication bio. If it’s a letter to the editor or sponsored content, there will likely be a link to more information on them or their affiliation. Or look them up on Google. Most reporters will have a history or past article and/or affiliations. Recently, I tried to check out a reporter on a new publication (ironically focused on AI) and I could not find them on Google, which was highly unusual.
  5. Check the cited resources. This is going an extra step but depending on the situation, it’s helpful. Check out the sources (reports or other articles) that the author has cited and put them through the same checklist.
  6. Make sure you are looking at the right source. Some folks will go so far as to spoof a legitimate publisher to post their information. (Or even more likely to try to get your credit card information.) So if something still doesn’t look right – check the domain name. If you are looking for the Vikings make sure you are looking at [https://www.vikings.com/] NOT [https://www.vickings.com/ or https://www.vikings.us or https://www.mnvikings.com/%5D. Also please don’t try those last three addresses – I made them up, but they might go to sources that are trying to spoof the site.

I hope that’s helpful. Always in the back of my mind I ask myself why this person is sharing this information. Is it a journalist, a scientist, a lobbyist, a sales person or a community member? And what is their agenda?

I don’t go through the checklist every time. I have my trusted resources and that’s a manageable way for me to feel confident with information. But I do use this checklist a couple of times a week with new publications. A year ago, I used it less often.

To learn more about information literacy, especially if you are in a position to teach or influence others, check out the American Library Association (ALA) resources on the topic.

Research shows rural broadband deployment positively affected employment

A new report (Wired and working? An evaluation of broadband expansion in Rural America) has come out on the impact of CAF on rural communities…

This paper addresses this [rural broadband] gap by evaluating the Connect America Fund (CAF), one of the largest federal broadband programs. CAF provided an unprecedented scale of financial incentives for broadband deployment to companies offering services in unserved or underserved rural areas across the United States. In theory, this support would allow eligible carriers to recover some of their costs and provide services that would otherwise remain unavailable. As a result of CAF, we expect both increased broadband access and expanded economic opportunities enabled by the expanded access. CAF operated until 2020, after which it was replaced by an even larger program: the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund. …

Our results suggest that broadband deployment positively affected employment, both in total levels and as a share of the labor force, and increased median household income in the benefited areas. These effects generally strengthened over time, particularly during the pandemic, with earlier-treated areas experiencing the largest gains. Distinctly, we do not find consistent evidence of impacts on self-employment. Our findings offer new insights into how large-scale infrastructure investments can shape local labor markets.