Mendota Heights, MN|News|
Get Out ... and Explore the Mendota Heights Area Aug. 5-7
Relay for Life, tree-gazing and West African music are on the weekend calendar.

Hometown: Hard to say. I was born in Long Beach, California, but I've been a Minnesota girl since 1995.<b><br>Birthday</b>: Jan. 20, 1983<br><b>Bio: </b>Graduated in December of 2006 from the University of Minnesota with degrees in journalism and global studies, with a Latin America area focus. Promptly jumped into coverage of the state Legislature, then worked as a non-partisan writer for the Minnesota Senate. Took a position as the news editor of the South-West Review for two years before joining Patch.<br><br><b>My Beliefs</b>
<i>At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible and human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal certain key beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable.</i>
<i>This disclosure is </i><i>not a license for our editors to inject these beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: We hope that the knowledge that our beliefs are on the record will force us to be ever mindful to write, report, and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you, the user, ever think you see evidence that we failed in this mission, we wholeheartedly invite you to let us know.</i>
<br><b>Politics </b><br>How would you describe your political beliefs? I'm socially liberal, possibly libertarian to a degree. I thoroughly enjoyed economics, free market theory as well as Marxist social theory in college. There is no one right answer in today's complex world.
<br><strong>Are you registered with a certain party?</strong> No<br><br><b>Religion</b><br>How religious would you consider yourself? (casual, observant, devout, non religious) Humanist<br><b><br>Local Hot-Button Issues</b><br>What do you think are the most important issues facing the community? I think Mendota Heights Patch communities are concerned about maintaining development standards, ensuring strong education for students, and having a say in maintaining the natural environment that is part of our cities.
<br><strong>Where do you stand on each of these issues?</strong> I think elitist development standards can exclude certain demographic groups from joining the community, which worries me. With that being said, taking ownership in our neighborhoods, education system and environmental health is a priceless attribute and residents should feel lucky to live in such an invested community.
Relay for Life, tree-gazing and West African music are on the weekend calendar.

The Aug. 1 meeting of the District 197 School Board, in brief.
A strike of bad luck occurred near Henry Sibley High School Monday afternoon.
The District 197 School Board will meet Monday, Aug. 1 at Mendota Heights City Hall for a regular business meeting.
The school district interviewed a new interim superintendent candidate, the Mendota Post Office has been targeted for closure, and residents are getting ready for Night to Unite.
Decision expected at Monday's school board meeting.
Residents would likely receive home delivery if the location were to close.
In this weekly video series, Mendota Heights Patch will sit down with the mayors of Mendota Heights, Mendota and Lilydale for regular city updates—all in about a minute.
From indoors to outdoors, quiet voices to booming finales, this weekend's planner has something to suit everyone.
A proposal by White Pines Senior Living to build a senior care facility at Mendota Plaza is scheduled to be before the planning commission Tuesday night.
Follow detours and use west parking lot access to Henry Sibley High School.
A source of mobility for the condo's older residents is back in operation after modernization project.
The state shutdown came to an end, planners are digging in for a farmers market this fall, and oh yeah, it was mighty hot.
A number of car break-ins reported at parks.
Camping will be available at many state park sites this weekend.
A presentation to the city council Tuesday outlined options on the table and a tight deadline to pull it off this year.
Four of seven positions are up for election.
Youth and adult golfers are taking advantage of the city-owned course on Dodd Road.
Star Tribune reports the owners of the Cambria countertop company have purchased the airline.