The Journal March 23–April 5

Page 1

THE NEWS SOURCE FOR DOWNTOWN & NORTHEAST MINNEAPOLIS RESIDENTS MARCH 23–APRIL 5, 2017

s s e n i s u b y t t i s n a e u h m t r m No rews co b rewery b g n i n ope cals in o l o t s ok wing lo e r B k c Clo Broken , w a l ew Under n

Eric Best / ebest@journalmpls.com

T

hanks to a new law, a group of homebrewers is tapping locals to become investors in its brewery in Northeast Minneapolis. The group, Broken Clock Brewing, will be one of just a few cooperative brewing companies in the state — and the second in Northeast Minneapolis after Fair State Brewing Cooperative — when it opens this spring. Along with several other small, up-and-coming brewers, Broken

Clock co-founders Jeremy Mathison and Jeremy Gharineh are taking advantage of a new law dubbed MNvest to finance the venture with the help of Minnesota residents. “It’s a perfect relationship because you’re really leveraging a community of people that can now invest in a company that, before, never had the ability to,” Mathison said. “So you can invest anywhere from $500 to $10,000 in

Mike Johnson, Jeremy Mathison and Will Hubbard will soon open Northeast Minneapolis’ second brewing cooperative in the Marshall Terrace neighborhood. Photo by Eric Best

SEE BROKEN CLOCK / PAGE 14

Six candidates meet in first mayoral forum

INSIDE

LOCAL

FLAVOR

Candidates talk wages, housing and public safety

By Dylan Thomas / dthomas@journalmpls.com Six candidates shared their visions for Minneapolis at the 2017 campaign season’s first mayoral forum, held March 8 at Calvary Church in the Whittier neighborhood. Organized by Ward 10 City Council Member Lisa Bender and moderated by Tane Danger of the Theater of Public Policy improv troupe, the 90-minute forum probed the candidate’s positions on a citywide minimum wage, affordable housing and police-community relations, among other issues. Mayor Betsy Hodges, who is

seeking a second term, was joined at the forum by state Rep. Raymond Dehn, Ward 3 City Council Member Jacob Frey, former Hennepin Theatre Trust CEO Tom Hoch, civil rights attorney and activist Nekima Levy-Pounds and filmmaker Aswar Rahman. For his first question, Danger noted that Minneapolis operates under what he described as a “pseudo-weak mayor system,” and asked why the candidates wanted to be mayor when they could possibly affect more change in a different role.

Hoch, linking Minneapolis’ cultural relevance to economic growth, argued the city was falling behind places like Boulder, Colo., Austin, Tex., and Indianapolis — “all cities that are thinking big and acting big and making a big mark” — and said, as mayor, he would work to regain the city’s lost momentum. Hodges said she ran on a platform of equity, growth and good governance in 2013, adding: “I’ve spent the last three-andSEE MAYORAL FORUM / PAGE 2

UP NORTH (LOOP) Feeling like a VIP at Tullibee, Hewing Hotel’s new destination restaurant PAGE 13


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