Now that Black Lives Mwwatter and St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman have reached a safe and reasonable compromise regarding this weekend's planned protest ("Protesters will demonstrate but not interfere with marathon," StarTribune.com, Oct. 1), it will be interesting to note the reactions of the runners participating in the Twin Cities Marathon, in particular those who publicly pleaded with BLM not to disrupt the event while professing a desire to support the movement. Perhaps these individuals as well as other participants could take a page from one runner who has committed to wearing a singlet with the words "Black Lives Matter" printed on it. Printing these words on their singlets would make for an amazing show of solidarity.
Jessica Mork, Edina
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Minnesota has some of the worst, and in some cases the worst, racial disparities among African-American, Native Americans and whites in the U.S. in the areas of health, education, incarceration and homeownership. Recently, the Star Tribune ran several articles discussing an alarming decrease in income among African-Americans. These structural racial inequities burst into flames with every frightening escalation of force by police, often with African-Americans being seriously injured or killed.
Meanwhile, the public discussion about Black Lives Matter has seemed to be on a level of condemning misdirected chants at the group's State Fair protest and this past week's growing cacophony of criticism for BLM having the temerity to consider disrupting a sporting event.
Racial inequities are a big, ugly problem for Minnesota. We need some leadership from the top. I would like Gov. Mark Dayton to create a racial equity task force composed of a majority of young black and Native leaders — those who see the inequities the most clearly and who are not preservers of the status quo. This task force can be charged with identifying structural racism in the areas of government, finance, education, and health care and finding ways to dismantle and correct it. First the truth comes out, then the problem-solving happens.
And, thank you, Black Lives Matter, for making us uncomfortable. We should be. Minnesota is in pretty bad shape where racial inequities are concerned. It's time to deal with it.
John Vaughn, Stillwater
CHARTER SCHOOLS
Some failure is anticipated, but know that it comes with costs
To Marshall Tanick's fine overview of the legality and status of charter schools ("Are charter schools unconstitutional?" Oct. 1), I would add one more detail. When charter schools fail, or are closed, or don't meet their enrollment projections and fail to open, as was the case with several this fall, where do those children go? Back to the public schools, disrupting already difficult school district planning, classes, school life. This is a little-discussed "intended consequence" of charters, where some failures are assumed. That is one of the reasons my daughter, a mother and active member of the League of Women Voters in Seattle, successfully sought to prevent the mass arrival there of charter schools. Individual charter schools have merit. But the costs have to be fully assessed, and may well be greater than benefits.
James P. Lenfestey, Minneapolis
CONDO LAW
It's not lawyers nor the law that have hampered construction
The Sept. 30 editorial on how litigation has limited condo development was wrong on multiple points. Condo construction defects are real, but the woes cited in the editorial were greatly exaggerated. We are three lawyers who have sued developers for dangerous conditions such as a dilapidated, nearly condemned parking ramp; a retaining wall so poorly built it had to be torn down and replaced, and a basement in a converted older building that was about to collapse.