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City approves bringing car sharing to the streets

May 14, 2013 by · No Comments · Minneapolis Daily News

Upstart City Council candidate Jacob Frey handily won the DFL endorsement on Saturday after incumbent Diane Hofstede withdrew from contention, citing irregularities in the caucus process.

Hofstede, who plans to run in the November election, is the fourth council member who has left their local DFL convention without the party’s nod in recent weeks. Her ward covers much of the central riverfront, including parts of downtown and northeast.

She announced her withdrawal to an auditorium at DeLaSalle High School filled with red Jacob Frey campaign shirts. Frey campaign staff estimated that more than 70 percent of the delegates were their supporters.

“The process has become flawed,” Hofstede told the crowd. “Older residents and our new Americans have been discouraged and sometimes disrespected while trying to participating in the endorsement process.”

Hofstede had made several pledges to political groups and media outlets that she would abide by the endorsement, but will now challenge the DFL endorsee. “I will take my campaign to the people and let them decide,” she said.

Council Member Robert Lilligren made similar accusations when he withdrew from his DFL convention last week, which was also packed in his challenger’s favor.

“This process has been legitimate,” Frey told a crowd of cheering supporters. “It has not been flawed in any way.”

Two delegate challenges, one from each campaign’s supporters, were filed but never came to the floor because the convention did not get that far, said city DFL chair Dan McConnell.

Following the convention, Hofstede said in an interview that several precincts had “problems communicating the process to people who wanted to be engaged,” particularly members of the city’s East African community. She later added some people were recorded as alternates — a backup delegate — ­who wanted to be regular delegates.

In one precinct with a large East African population, however, nearly 40 people were elected delegates from one address inhabited largely by East African residents, McConnell said. A reporter in attendance on caucus night witnessed some initial confusion which caused many East Africans to volunteer as alternates, but the process was later repeated. One of the attendees helped translate proceedings into Somali.

About ten of the precinct’s 30 listed alternates appeared to be East African, McConnell said. Mohamed Barre, who was coordinating some of the East Africans in the precinct that night, said there were challenges understanding the process. “We did not want to be alternates as long as we could have more delegates,” Barre said.

Frey spokeswoman Julie Harrison said the Hofstede campaign had “borrowed a page from the playbook of what happened in [Lilligren's ward] last week.”

In North Minneapolis on Saturday, council president Barbara Johnson cruised to an early victory on the first ballot of her ward convention. Her challenger was Kris Brogan.

Source: startribune.com

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Minneapolis parking ramp assailant sentenced to 20 years

April 25, 2013 by · No Comments · Minneapolis Daily News

A Minneapolis man who had a history of sexual assault was sentenced to 20 years in prison for a knife attack that nearly killed a woman in a downtown Minneapolis parking ramp last year.

Robert John Meyers, 49, was sentenced to the maximum allowed because the judge factored in the brutal nature of the attack and a previous conviction for criminal sexual assault in Iowa. The recommended sentence was 13 years and two months.

“Your conduct fell just short of murder,” Hennepin County District Judge Robert Small told Meyers at Friday’s sentencing.

The sentence came exactly one year after Meyers, dressed in a business suit and carrying a black bag with a shoulder strap, followed a 28-year-old legal assistant on a Thursday afternoon after she left an elevator in the ramp at 800 Marquette Av. S.

He followed her to her car and then put a hunting knife to her throat. The woman screamed, stomped on his foot and bit him before he pushed the knife into her abdomen, severely injuring her. Later that same night, an off-duty police officer caught Meyers after Meyers allegedly stole a woman’s purse at a bar.

In court, Meyers apologized for the attack, said he had found God in prison and called the attack the result of a terrible childhood that made him hate women.

Source: startribune.com

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Surly buys Minneapolis site for $20 million brewery

April 16, 2013 by · No Comments · Minneapolis Daily News

It’s official: Surly is coming to Minneapolis.

The craft brewer with a cult following purchased a plot of land Monday where it will build a veritable mecca for beer fans: a $20 million “destination brewery” unlike anything in Minnesota. The facility in the Prospect Park neighborhood will be replete with brewery, beer hall and beer garden.

“We’re excited to be moving to a central location that’ll be a destination for everyone in the Twin Cities,” said Omar Ansari, president of the Brooklyn Center-based company. A consultant for the company said it could be brewing in Minneapolis by 2014, if all goes as planned.

The announcement caps a search that began two years ago when the Legislature approved the so-called Surly bill, allowing brewers to sell pints of their beer on the premises. The new law also helped spur a craft beer boom in neighborhoods across the Twin Cities.

The 8.3-acre site, formerly a food processing plant, is located at the corner of Malcolm Avenue and 5th Street SE. It is just north of what will eventually become the Central Corridor light rail’s Westgate station.

Tom Hauschild, a real estate consultant for the company, said the location is ideal because it is industrially zoned, large enough to accommodate expansion, and close to light rail and bike trails.“This site has so many great attributes,” he said.

The company successfully won $2 million in environmental remediation grants — $500,000 less than they requested — from Hennepin County, the state and the Metropolitan Council to clean up pollution that accumulated over a century of industrial use. It’s also seeking a $500,000 transit-oriented development loan from the county.

Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak said the city worked with the brewer to change the law and transform the site. “Minnesota Nice is about to get Surly,” he quipped.

Brooklyn Center was among the cities bidding to win the new brewery, but it hasn’t lost the company.

The new facility is intended to expand on, rather than replace, the Brooklyn Center brewery, which will remain operational.

The company said the Minneapolis site is large enough to accommodate production of 100,000 barrels of beer a year. Surly’s production will exceed 20,000 barrels this year.

Attention now turns to the finer details of the plan. The next step is to document pollution at the site in order to release the remediation funds. The company also said Monday that it had hired Barr Engineering as environmental specialists and McGough Construction as general contractor.

The facility — part brewery, part bar and event center — will be the first of its kind in Minnesota. Hauschild said the Stone Brewing Co. brewery in Escondido, Calif., has a similar focus, “although the design styling may be quite different.”

Source: startribune.com
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Quick News: Carp DNA in Minnesota rivers turns out to be false alarm

April 8, 2013 by · No Comments · Minneapolis Daily News

Alarm bells went off in 2011 when wildlife researchers found surprising amounts of DNA from invasive carp in the St. Croix and Mississippi rivers and even above the Coon Rapids Dam.

Could the voracious fish already be here in large numbers? Could the DNA have come from the droppings of birds who had eaten the carp elsewhere? Or from illegally released baby carp used as bait?

None of the above, it turns out. It was a false alarm.

A new, comprehensive analysis released Thursday shows that if there are invasive carp in Minnesota’s rivers, they haven’t left behind any biological fingerprints to prove it. That doesn’t mean there aren’t any — a silver carp was found near Winona in February. But it does mean Minnesota may have more time than it thought to defend against an invasion of voracious carp working their way up the Mississippi River from Illinois and Iowa.

“It’s good news, but it doesn’t change the fact that Asian carp are starting to show up more frequently,” said Irene Jones, of Friends of the Mississippi River.

Two years ago, a new technology that tracked DNA fragments left in water showed the presence of silver carp, one of four invasive species, by St. Croix Falls and even above the Coon Rapids Dam in the Mississippi River. Invasive carp have been caught from time to time, but the DNA suggested that Minnesota might have more of the fish than anyone knew.

Then last year researchers collected 50 water samples from eight sites on the Mississippi and St. Croix Rivers, plus samples from the Mississippi in Iowa, where silver and big head carp are plentiful. And, using a much more precise way of identifying it, they concluded that none of DNA fragments in Minnesota waters were from carp. While they did find DNA from silver carp in samples from Iowa, they didn’t find any at all for big head carp, a puzzler that raises questions about the validity of the technology, said lead researcher Peter Sorenson, an invasives expert at the University of Minnesota.

The different findings likely mean one of two things: Either the DNA found earlier wasn’t from carp, or it was and the carp have skedaddled. Researchers are not sure which.

“I wish I could answer that,” said Sorenson, director of Minnesota Aquatic Invasive Species Research Center at the U.

Steve Hirsch of the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources said the agency will continue to rely on netting and commercial fishing operations to monitor for the presence of carp in Minnesota rivers.

“ I don’t think any of us view these results as indicating that this is not an urgent situation,” he said.

DNR officials are working on a plan to install a barrier of noise and bubbles at the Ford Dam near Fort Snelling. But even if that is built and works, it wouldn’t help the St. Croix or Minnesota River systems.

As for the DNA technology, Sorenson said it may prove useful in the future, but clearly needs more work.

Source: startribune.com

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Minneapolis News: Minneapolis SWAT officer wins big cash on TV reality show

March 27, 2013 by · No Comments · Minneapolis News

A Minneapolis police SWAT officer has won $10,000 for himself and $100,000 of equipment for the Minneapolis Police Department’s SWAT unit, beating 13 other SWAT officers in a televised competion on the Outdoor Channel cable television network.

Officer Tony Caspers, a 24-year veteran of the Minneapolis Police Department, was declared the winner on Wednesday night of a reality television series called ETU, which stands for Elite Tactical Unit. The episodes will re-air on the Outdoor Channel next month.

Caspers, 45, of Blaine, and the other officers from around the United States battled drug kingpins and returned pretend gunfire in a series of make-believe scenarios that included raiding houses and rescuing hostages. The officers used laser guns rather than live ammunition. The episodes were filmed in Arkansas, Missouri and New Hampshire.

Caspers was a last minute replacement in the competition. In the Wednesday final, he competed against a SWAT officer from Dallas. Mitch Petrie, an assistant producer, said he hosted a large party on Wednesday night in New Hope at a firearm training facility, Sealed Mindset, where Casper’s friends, family and other officers, and sponsors watched the show.

Photo: Minneapolis Police Chief Janee Harteau (center) receiving mock check on Wednesday for $100,000 from Marc Kidd, Outdoor Channel President of Media Sales (left). Officer Tony Caspers is on the right.

Source: startribune.com

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8 Reasons That Make an E-Commerce Website The Most Attractive Business

March 22, 2013 by · No Comments · web design

Today, consumers access the Internet more often than ever before, either through their smartphones, smart-pads, or computers. And here are three market trends that contribute to this behavior among the consumers: Free public Wi-Fi networks, more affordable laptop/desktop computers, and a growing usage and demand for mobile devices and apps.

These market trends make it more attractive and affordable for consumers to own these devices. With the ability to access the internet from their devices anywhere, anytime, consumers are enjoying their convenience. This is growing web traffic, and quickly, which gives rise to an ever expanding market opportunity on the Internet. The companies that have seen the biggest gains out of this opportunity are E-commerce businesses. Here are 8 facts about E-commerce websites that make them competitive, profitable and affordable for small businesses in today’s environment:

First, you would have to put up tens of thousands of dollars, if not more, to set up a traditional, brick-and-mortar store. With E-commerce store, you only need a small fraction of that, which makes it more feasible for you to test out your business idea at a much lower cost.

Second, you can maintain a low overhead cost with an E-commerce store by avoiding large expenses like office space, electricity, etc. This is a huge cost reduction for small businesses.

Third, it is easy to manage your E-commerce store with remote internet access. The flexibility of the online store allows you to get things done at your own pace and on your own time so you can spend more time with family, or travel with your loved ones.

Fourth, since many consumers today are using the internet to find products and services they need before making the purchase at the store or online, consumers’ transactions are moving more and more toward the web. This is great news for E-commerce stores because they can now compete with brick and mortar stores on a level playing field, at a much lower cost.

Fifth, having a large inventory is often a headache for many managers and business owners in retail industries. With an E-commerce website, you can keep your inventory low or even at zero. If you are a retailer, you can order the products from your vendors after customers have placed their order on your website. You can also sell a wider variety of products, from different vendors. These are popular approaches many E-commerce businesses today often take to maintain a strong cash flow, to increase revenue, and to respond fast to the changes in the market environment.

Sixth, you can sell banner ads on your site to businesses that sell products related to yours. For example, if you sell ink cartridges, you can also sell banner ads on your site to companies that sell printers such as HP, Canon, Brother, Lexmark, etc. These banner ads create another revenue stream for your business.

Seventh, with an E-commerce store, you can grow at your own pace, and the sky is the limit. You can choose to grow locally, nationally or internationally. Here are a few businesses that have yielded significant success with their online store: Versare.com, NewEgg.com, and the most well-known, Dell.com.

Eighth, and my favorite fact of all, you can keep your store open online store 24-7, so while you are sleeping, your website is still making money for you.

E-commerce stores are getting more and more popular among retailers today because they are helping businesses capture a growing market share during our current period of explosive growth in Internet usage spawned by mobile devices. Even big box retail stores like BestBuy, Target and Walgreens have established E-commerce stores to stay competitive with their primary brick-and-mortar competitors and other, smaller E-commerce retail stores. With the affordability, flexibility and profitability that an online store can provide, E-commerce website will continue to lead the way in today’s business landscape.

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Proweb365 is Minneapolis web design Firm

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The Importance of Web-Based Marketing for Businesses in Today’s Environment

March 5, 2013 by · No Comments · Online Marketing, web design

Today’s customers use search engines such as Google, Yahoo and Bing to learn about products or services prior to purchasing them. With a few clicks of the mouse, customers can gain enough information to make their final purchase decision. This trend is increasingly fast and customers expect every business to have a website. Research has shown that 95% of customers who use search engines only contact those businesses that are listed in the top 10. This means businesses that already have a website but have not utilized search engine optimization (SEO) to push their websites into top 10 ranking are losing an edge to their competitors. Imagine, without a website, how any business can stay competitive in today’s market.

In the past, just by looking through your windows, you could tell whether your local competitors were wooing away your customers. Nowadays, it is harder because many customers use Internet to compare products and services prior to making any purchases. With that being said, if you want to gain and retain customers, here are 5 things you need to make priorities in your business marketing campaign.

First, search for websites that provide products and services similar to your business to see how they present themselves online. Then select 2 to 3 of these websites that you like the most.

Second, request quotes from multiple web design firms and compare web design costs among different providers. Try not to go for the cheapest quote, but for the most reasonable one. Many times, this will land you at mid-range prices and that is what you need because it keeps you away from overcharged providers and under-performed snatchers. Also, make sure you ask all the potential providers whether they can custom-design your future website to have a unique look and good functions as the websites you like in part one above.

Third, make sure the web design company that you select will prepare a contract for you. The contract should state that you own the copyrights to your custom website design and includes everything they promised to you.

Fourth, make sure your selected provider agrees to coach you on how to manage your website after they build it. This will save you lots of money in the long run for the things that you can easily do on your own such as editing your website’s contents and pictures.

Fifth, find an Internet marketing firm that can help rank your business website on Google’s top 10 listing. SEO campaign is where you get the most return on your investment if done correctly.

New consumer requirements and rapid growth of online traffic are among the forces that signal the need for repositioning your business marketing strategies toward web-based. The five tips above are important steps to help you find a qualified web design firm and SEO provider to position your business professionally and effectively on the Internet.

ProWeb365 is a Minnesota web design firm that offers compelling, affordable web design. Our web design prices are listed right on the website for customers to see and compare. For further assistance, please contact ProWeb365 at info@ProWeb365.com or (612) 590-8080.

 

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Minnesota Quick News: Rollout of high-tech bingo games is delayed

February 20, 2013 by · No Comments · Minneapolis News

Minnesotans waiting for the rollout of electronic bingo games at bars and restaurants will need to wait at least another month as the Minnesota Gambling Control Board delayed approval Tuesday of the first game in the pipeline.

The electronic bingo games, along with electronic pulltabs, were approved by the Legislature last year to boost charitable gambling revenues to fund the new Minnesota Vikings stadium.

The first electronic “linked bingo” game — linking players at multiple locations — did not win board approval because it had not yet been certified as meeting state game standards, said Tom Barrett, executive director of the Gambling Control Board.

“I was hopeful we could have these games today,” Barrett said. “Am I hopeful for next month? Yes.”

The high-tech bingo games will have far bigger prizes than the video pulltab games that were launched in September, manufacturers say, and potentially could generate considerable revenue for the state.

Many charitable gambling managers predict e-bingo will be received well by customers, in particular those who haven’t been fans of the video pulltab games.

But before the bingo games can get up and running in the bars, the Gambling Control Board must license and approve the manufacturer, distributor and the games themselves.

E-tab Manufacturing, based in St. Paul, had hoped its bingo application would be approved by now, said Jim Landsem, managing partner for the company.

E-tab submitted its application package last summer for pulltabs and bingo, he said. In September, it gave the board its games and its gambling device, which plays pulltabs and bingo.

The board approved the pulltab games in December, Landsem said, and E-tab games are now in more than 50 bars and restaurants.

It’s now a matter of being able to turn on the bingo portion of the hand-held video device, he said. He hopes the game can be certified by the next Gambling Control Board meeting in March.

The e-bingo field will get more competition in the future. Another manufacturer, Electronic Games Solutions, based in St. Louis, also is hoping to roll out a bingo game soon, pending board approval.

A third e-bingo manufacturer, the California-based Planet Bingo, has its license pending board approval, Barrett said.

Source: startribune.com

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Learn About Pay for Performance

January 21, 2013 by · No Comments · Online Marketing, web design

As opposed to organic search results (free by nature), the majority of search engines now offer Pay for Performance (PFP) options. Pay for Performance lets you promote your site by paying for SE exposure, rather than by relying on solely organic listings determined by your SEO efforts.
There are three main types of Pay for Performance options:

-    Pay-per-click – the best examples are Google AdWords, and Microsoft adCenter. With pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, advertisers place bids for different search keywords. When users perform searches for these keywords, advertiser short, textual ads are shown together with organic results. If a user clicks on one of these ads, the advertiser is charged the per-click sum agreed to earlier.
-    Paid inclusion (or paid submission) is a fee-based inclusion into the database or directory of a search engine. The more prominent paid inclusion programs are Yahoo! Search Submit and Yahoo! Directory Submit.
-     Paid sponsorship – with this model, an advertiser pays a flat fee to a search engine. In return, the search engine shows the advertiser’s ads together with search results for pre-selected keywords. ExactSeek, for example, features this pay-for-performance model.

PPC advertising is by far the most widespread form of pay-for-performance search marketing. As it’s the most effective way for a search engine to make money, PPC is offered by almost every SE on Earth. However, the two most prominent providers of PPC advertising are Google (Google Adwords) and Bing (Bing AdSense).

Google AdWords is the world leader in pay-per-click advertising. Currently it has more than 2,000,000 advertisers. The ads show up not only with Google search results, but also with Google partners such as AOL search, About.com and billions of other websites that publish AdWords ads. Google has an interesting ad ranking system. It ranks ads not by the bid (the amount their owners are ready to pay for one click), but by the combination of the bid and the click-through ratio. This way, Google maximizes its revenue stream (since Revenue to Google = Bid x CTR x Views) and gives small advertisers an opportunity to effectively compete with big companies. A small advertiser cannot compete on the cost-per-click basis, but can successfully overcome any big company in terms of the click-through ratio.

AdWords gives advertisers several options to target keywords: broad matching, exact matching, phrase matching, and negative keywords. The matching options define how close the search string entered by a user should be to a keyword selected by an advertiser. If the advertiser has chosen [web Design] as their keyword (square brackets mean exact match), their ad will be shown only if a user enters web design into the search box. If the advertiser has chosen “web design price” (quotes mean phrase match), the ad shows up if a user searches for “affordable web design price”  or “how much web design price” or simply “web design”. Finally, if the advertiser has chosen web design price with no brackets or quotes around it (for a broad match), the ad will show up even if a user enters “how to learn web design” or “modern design”. With negative keywords, advertisers can prevent their ad from showing up if a user enters this keyword. For example, a retailer would usually add -free, -replica to the keywords list to avoid targeting “free stuff” hunters.

Currently, there is a wide variety of Pay for Performance search models; however, the most widely used and accepted is PPC (pay-per-click) advertising. One recent development with AdWords was the release of AdWords API (application program interface) that will allow third-party developers to create applications that will work directly with AdWords accounts facilitating and automating many bid and ad management tasks.

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Minnesota flu outbreak rivals deadly pandemic of 2009

January 10, 2013 by · No Comments · Minneapolis News

Minnesota appears to be in the midst of the worst flu outbreak since the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, health officials said Wednesday.

A record number of children — 123 — tested positive for the flu at Children’s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota in the first week of January, and 16 were hospitalized, according to Patsy Stinchfield, the director of infectious diseases.

The numbers, she said, are higher “than our highest week in the H1N1 pandemic.”

Meanwhile, local clinics are reporting a surge in demand for flu shots following news reports that two teenagers have died in Minnesota of complications of the flu in the past two weeks.

New statewide numbers are expected to be released Thursday, but one Health Department official said Wednesday that more than 900 people have been hospitalized so far this season — a big spike just in the past week. By comparison, only 552 people were hospitalized in Minnesota during the entire last flu season.

“This thing has really spread like wildfire,” said Dr. Gregory Poland, a flu specialist at the Mayo Clinic.

As recently as last week, state health officials were saying that this year’s outbreak was simply off to an early, but not unusual, start. But now, Minnesota may be “on track for what we saw during the pandemic,” said Kris Ehresmann, who oversees the infectious disease program at the Minnesota Department of Health. “And it’s not slowing down.”

In 2009, more than 1,700 people were hospitalized in Minnesota when a new flu strain spread around the globe. Most cases, however, were relatively mild.

This year, “the kids we’re seeing seem to need more [medical care],” Stinchfield said. “They just seem to be sicker kids.”

She noted that Children’s has stopped testing every patient with flu symptoms because it’s running low on rapid-influenza test kits, which are reportedly in short supply around the country.

The flu is now widespread in more than 40 states, according to federal officials, and numbers have been rising for the past month.

About 5.6 percent of all doctor visits in the United States now are for influenza, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That compares with 2.2 percent at the peak of the season last year.

In Boston, officials declared a health emergency Wednesday and started offering free flu shots in the face of an escalating number of cases.

Most people have been infected by a particularly severe strain of flu known as H3N2.

On Tuesday, a 14-year-old St. Louis Park girl died of complications of the flu, the second apparently otherwise healthy teenager to succumb to the disease in 10 days. In December, a 17-year-old Texas teenager died at Regions Hospital in St. Paul after he fell ill while visiting relatives.

‘Throwing up is gross’

By Wednesday, clinics throughout the Twin Cities were reporting an increase in calls about flu shots. One Fairview clinic had to reassign a nurse to handle the flood of requests, while Children’s reported an uptick in flu-shot requests throughout its hospitals and clinics.

At the Target Clinic in Roseville on Wednesday evening, teenagers and their parents spilled out of the small, open lobby waiting to get shots from the nurse practitioner on duty.

Jon Edin, 47, of Roseville, brought his son Erik, 15, after reading about the local deaths and the Boston outbreak.

“We’ve been meaning to do it, and the news was the thing that pushed us over the edge,” Jon Edin said. “Might as well be careful.”

“And throwing up is gross,” said Erik Edin, a ninth-grader at Roseville High School. “I’d rather not be sick this season.”

Nearby, Heidi Bentz of Roseville waited with her children — Calvin, 15, and Kaitlyn, 12. Bentz said she got her flu shot a few days ago, but she came back with her kids after word spread about the students’ deaths.

“It’s on Facebook, on the news, all the talk at school,” she said. “It’s scarier as you’re hearing more about it.”

Rising demand at U

Dave Golden, director of public health at the University of Minnesota’s Boynton Health Service, said despite the winter break, the U has seen an uptick in vaccinations. The U doesn’t generally conduct walk-in clinics during January but is doing so now to meet demand. “Tragedy hits and people will respond,” Golden said.

The U will decide whether to take any additional measures before students return from break. In the meantime, they’ll be encouraging students to get shots, despite some concerns about the vaccine. “We know it’s not 100 percent [effective], but we know it’s better than not being vaccinated,” Golden said.

Also Wednesday, a Mayo Clinic spokesman urged Minnesota employers to consider modifying their sick-leave policies so that employees don’t have to venture out and get a doctor’s note to miss work.

For many parents, the news of recent flu deaths “was a wake-up call,” said Ehresmann of the HealthDepartment.

At the same time, she said such deaths can occur in any flu season. “I don’t want to minimize it; it just makes me sick that this happened,” she said.

She said the best way to fight the flu, in addition to flu shots, is to encourage people to stay home if they’re sick.

“You may think it won’t affect anybody else, but you don’t know,” she said. “We just don’t know who we’re potentially infecting and what kind of a devastating effect we can have on them.”