Posted inBlack Business Spotlight

Essential Salt Spa

After a 40 minute session changed her breathing and sense of smell, Greta Sher opened Essential Salt Spa in Minneapolis. The spa’s dry salt therapy circulates pharmaceutical grade sodium chloride to help clear airways and calm skin conditions. Sher says halotherapy supports, not replaces, treatment plans and is part of a more affordable, inclusive approach to wellness.

Posted inFinances FYI

How to Build Generational Wealth via Real Estate Investing

Historically, systemic barriers like a lack of equal access to credit for homebuying and a lack of access to home ownership have made it difficult for Black families trying to overcome the racial wealth gap and build generational wealth. JPMorgan Wealth Management provides resources to help Black, Hispanic, Latino, and everyone to “learn about investing […]

Posted inHealth + Wellness

Don’t wait! Get checked!

Last Saturday, a powerful panel of doctors, cancer survivors and physicians gathered at the University of Minnesota’s Masonic Cancer Center for Live Laugh Learn 2025, a cancer awareness event focused on the disparities in breast, prostate and colorectal cancer within the Black community. The message was clear and urgent: Don’t wait. Early detection saves lives, […]

Posted inNews

Hennepin County joins shift away from ‘pretextual’ enforcement

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty announced the county will stop prosecuting charges from pretextual traffic stops—expired tabs, window tint, and similar low-level violations—starting Oct. 15. Officials say the move reduces racial disparities and frees resources for violent crime; skeptics warn about losing an enforcement tool. The shift mirrors Ramsey County’s 2021 policy and Minneapolis’ consent-decree limits on stops.

Posted inOdds and Ends

Gopher outfielders focused on academics as well as softball

Gopher outfielders focused on academics as well as softball

Minnesota’s fall softball schedule is halfway done. The Gophers host Concordia-Saint Paul Friday night at Jane Sage Cowles Stadium on campus.
This also is senior centerfielder Breezy Burnett’s final fall campaign. We have followed her throughout her time in Minnesota since her freshman year.
“It went by so fast,” admitted the 5’7” Florida native after last Friday’s win over St. Cloud State. “It probably won’t hit me until I get deep into the spring.”
Her Gopherland years have been successful both on the diamond and in the classroom: two-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree, one of 12 softball players among 159 Gopher athletes so honored this past spring. “For me,” she continued, “it’s a standard to get good grades.”
Burnett last season started all 50 games and led the team in triples, a .982 fielding percentage and just one error. She started 53 games the season before and led Minnesota with 13 stolen bases. She had 41 starts in right field her freshman season, driving in 17 runs and scoring 14 that spring.
As she enters her senior year, her final season as a Gopher, Burnett said she is using the 10-game fall season, which concludes Oct. 10, “to get better, work out the kinks… For me, it’s getting my timing and getting back in the swing of things, especially when we are just starting up,” she pointed out.
“My personal goal is to hit for average, power, steal some bases, and make plays for my pitchers,” stressed Burnett. “And be a good teammate.”
Second-year left fielder Jae Cosgriff is looking to build off her first season as a Gopher. She started 45 of 49 games last spring and had a .968 fielding average with only two errors. She and Burnett currently are starting right alongside each other.
“I chose Minnesota because it’s a great school, great academics,” recalled the California native. “The coaching staff made me feel like going into a friend’s house. They made everything fun. All of it attracted me here.”
Said Burnett of Cosgriff, “She is going to be amazing. She is just a light for the team. Her work ethic is unmatched.”
Cosgriff is going into her sophomore year intending “to play and start all four years, and to get a great degree, hopefully do something in health.” She’s a biological sciences major.
Burnett will graduate with a journalism degree later this fall. “I am going to start my master’s in HR (human relations) hopefully in the spring,” she said.
Softball season normally doesn’t get underway until February, and typically schools such as Minnesota must play their early games in warmer locales that are not dealing with the final weeks of winter at the time. The Gophers’ two Black players both are looking forward to playing and hopefully help lead their team to the heights this season.

Posted inPolitics

Mpls mayoral race heats up at Westminster

At the Westminster Hall debate, Minneapolis mayoral candidates clashed over downtown vacancies, homeless encampments, rent control, and policing. Mayor Jacob Frey defended his housing record; Omar Fateh proposed vacancy and land-value taxes and a public-health approach to encampments. DeWayne Davis, Jazz Hampton, and Brenda Short outlined competing public safety and development plans. Early voting has begun.

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