YOUR GUIDE TO THE TWIN CITIES
Losing our lakes
A worried officer tells of the enormous struggle to protect state lakes. Updated: Mar. 15, 2011 - 01:09 PM
Officials in Minnesota's vacationland can't say 'no' to those who want to break the rules. Since 2005, land-use boards in Cass and Crow Wing counties allowed hundreds of home builders to break rules aimed at preserving the state's most valuable natural resource, according to a Star Tribune review of thousands of pages of building records.
Waterfront home built 39 feet from the water
Officials in Minnesota's vacationland can't say 'no' to those who want to break the rules.
Land-use boards in Cass and Crow Wing counties routinely allow home builders to break rules aimed at protecting the lakes from pollution and overdevelopment.
See variances allowed at more than 200 lakes
Lake Independence, 20 miles west of Minneapolis and surrounded by roll...
Part 2: Lake Independence was supposed to be Minnesota's first success in the Clean Water program. Instead, it was our first failure.
Eight years after Lake Independence was declared ‘impaired,’ however, the water remains almost as polluted as ever. A $410,000 grant was largely spent on less effective urban projects such as rain gardens after farmers and livestock owners declined to participate in the cleanup.
Cary Shoutz, Cross Lake area state conservation officer, cruises the s...
A worried officer tells of the enormous struggle to protect state lakes.
Cary Shoutz is one of 191 enforcement agents who are supposed to protect 12,000 lakes from safety and environmental violation. But some conservation officials, including Shoutz, say their forces have been been stretched by stagnant staffing during a 30-year boom in lakefront development. "I think we should be worried," he says.
House size, lot size, ground cover and distance to the water affect lakes.
A Lethal Dose: The war on synthetic drugs
They carry names like Bliss and TranQuility, but don't be fooled: Synthetic drugs can be deadly. From a small town in Oklahoma to suburban Minnesota, these products have generated unusual violence and physical suffering. Efforts to control these substances remains a losing battlle.
State regulators have failed to protect some of Minnesota's most vulnerable citizens from being victimized by their care givers. Even known criminals have obtained state permission to work in nursing homes and other care settings.
An apartment fire that killed six people in Minneapolis revealed serious flaws in the city's inspection practices and prompted major changes in the system. The apartments, which had multiple fire-code violations, were not inspected for at least 16 years.
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