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Howie: MCCU puts real money behind mental health
(Left to right): Annette Gunter, CAO, Brightwater Health; Karla Terry, Senior Executive Administrative Assistant, Brightwater Health; Ben Hatfield, CEO, Brightwater Health; Steve Ewers, President and CEO, Members Cooperative Credit Union; Brad Hoder, Director of Community Impact & Partnerships, Brightwater Health; Katie Marturano, Marketing Manager, Brightwater Health; Daniel McGaffey, CHRO, Brightwater Health; Jayme Langbehn, Clinical Director, Brightwater Health.

Tim Meyer: One Park One Vote built on solid sustainability

Whether residents ultimately agree with every proposal or not, the broader framework behind One Park One Vote deserves to be taken seriously because it attempts to connect housing, sustainability, environmental protection and economic development into one larger civic conversation.

Members Public

Howie: Don Ness and the reinvention of Duluth

Ness convinced Duluth to stop speaking about itself like a city waiting for the next economic funeral and start speaking about itself like a place with a future worth competing for nationally. Not perfectly. Not without backlash. Not without legitimate criticism. But undeniably.

Members Public
Howie: John Fedo turned Duluth toward the lake
Howie / HowieHanson.com

Howie: John Fedo turned Duluth toward the lake

Modern Duluth continues wrestling with the same tensions Mayor Fedo governed through decades ago. Tourism success created new economic pressures. Summer weekends increasingly made portions of Canal Park feel disconnected from the working-class identity that shaped Duluth for generations.

Members Public
Howie: Why LSC is winning the local college enrollment battle
Howie / HowieHanson.com

Howie: Why LSC is winning the local college enrollment battle

For years, America subtly treated trade education as a secondary path for students who supposedly could not “make it” academically. That narrative now looks outdated and borderline absurd. Many technical programs are competitive, mathematically rigorous and tied to industries starving for talent.

Members Public

Howie: Don Ness and the reinvention of Duluth

Ness convinced Duluth to stop speaking about itself like a city waiting for the next economic funeral and start speaking about itself like a place with a future worth competing for nationally. Not perfectly. Not without backlash. Not without legitimate criticism. But undeniably.

Members Public
Howie: John Fedo turned Duluth toward the lake
Howie / HowieHanson.com

Howie: John Fedo turned Duluth toward the lake

Modern Duluth continues wrestling with the same tensions Mayor Fedo governed through decades ago. Tourism success created new economic pressures. Summer weekends increasingly made portions of Canal Park feel disconnected from the working-class identity that shaped Duluth for generations.

Members Public