It has been quite a week already for Roxanne Givens, who has been trying to get state funding for an African-American museum in Minneapolis. On Monday, Gov. Mark Dayton released his $1 billion bonding bill – but did not include the project, which had been vetoed last year by Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty. On Tuesday, Dayton declared February as Black History Month in Minnesota. Following those decisions, Givens sent a scathing letter to Dayton on Tuesday, calling his decision "an abomination" and adding that African Americans "would not expect to be treated with the same brush stroke by the 'champion of the people', Governor Dayton" as they had been by Pawlenty. By Wednesday afternoon, after inquiries by the Star Tribune and others, all of that had changed. Givens said she got a call from the governor's office – which a Dayton spokesperson confirmed – announcing that the project would be included in Dayton's bonding request. Last year, Givens had unsuccessfully sought $840,000 for the project. "Yeah, all of a sudden" Dayton supports it, she said Wednesday. "I just got off the phone with his staff. "[They said], of course the governor supports this," she said. Katharine Tinucci, a spokesperson for the governor, said the project was left off the governor's state bonding request because of a "clerical error. It was supposed to be on there, but it was inadvertently left off." For now, Givens said she is satisfied -- compared to how she felt a day earlier. "I find your decision an abomination, and [a] rebuff to all African American Minnesota pioneers," Givens said in her original letter to the governor's office. "One has to ask, not only what message are you sending, but is there concern from the messenger about the ramifications of your message. "I find this a blatant expression and lack of concern for our children of every ethnicity, specifically African American children," she added. Givens said that while other museums in Minnesota honoring Swedish, Native American, Russian and Jewish cultures were all worthy, they were "no more, no less" significant than an African-American museum. In his proclamation declaring February as Black History Month, Dayton said it was a moment for Minnesotans to "honor, reflect, learn and be inspired by the history and heritage of a culture of one of our own that sacrificed, fought, and preserved in a quest towards the Minnesotan and American dream."