•••
Karen Tolkkinen’s article about today’s cabin rings so true (“The ideal lakeside cabin is not a McMansion. Let’s take better care,” Sept. 2). Our vision when buying our northwest Wisconsin lake lot and camping in 1977 became a reality with the shell we had built in 1988. Slowly it progressed as we made finishing touches over many years — a small log cabin in the woods on a little pristine lake. One bedroom, loft, bunkhouse. With plenty of land to expand, we will not. Our family and friends love this place.
Visiting our neighboring lakes with the onset of massive structures has been shocking to see. Did the owners miss the point? Then, in many cases, they sell and move on. Indifferent to the wake of destruction.
Phyliss Haugen, Minneapolis
GUN VIOLENCE
Not just a metro issue
Thanks to Jill Burcum for reminding readers that gun violence is a statewide issue. Too often gun violence is positioned as an urban issue, and that’s just not the case, as the Rocori and Red Lake shootings she referenced illustrate (“Two decades, few solutions since Rocori, Red Lake,” Strib Voices, Aug. 30).
If you live in greater Minnesota, please live up to your name. Contact your legislators and tell them to reinstate the assault weapons ban. Among those who need convincing just a week and a half after this tragedy are Rep. Paul Novotny, Rep. Mary Franson and Rep. Harry Niska, just to name a few, according to a recent article (“Democrats demand tougher gun laws,” Aug. 29). Not sure who represents you? Go to gis.lcc.mn.gov/iMaps/districts/ to find out.
I do take exception with the headline (which I realize she may not have written): “Two decades, few solutions ... .” I guess “few” is not the same as none; still, for those of us who have been working tirelessly to advocate for gun safety laws, it still stings.