What others can learn from how Minnesota helped its most vulnerable residents during the ICE surge

The surge of federal immigration agents in Minnesota over the past few months left many people not only traumatized but financially hard up.

People lost income because they were too afraid to go to work or their breadwinner was taken by agents of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement or Customs and Border Patrol. Small business owners, in turn, lost revenue because their workers and customers didn’t show up.

In Minneapolis alone, the city government now estimates 76,000 residents – or about 20% of the city’s population – have urgent needs in terms of lost wages, food insecurity and an inability to make rent, among other

Related News

How to Overcome Imposter Syndrome and Launch Your First Product with Confidence

Intel was on the brink of downfall. A twist in the AI race could boost its revival

Incident involving suspect with a knife closes Hwy. 101 in San Jose

Scott Pelley speaks: ‘CBS News is on fire’ and Bari Weiss should be removed

5 vehicles stolen from Alameda County parking garage in Oakland

Video footage shows large groups of people fighting in Oakland