News & Views of Phillips Since 1976
Monday December 22nd 2025

New Hours for Using Computers

By CARZ NELSON 

Hennepin County Library services during the Coronavirus Pandemic, visit www.hclib. org. All information is accurate as of September 15, 2020 

Franklin Library at 1413 E Franklin Avenue is open for computer use. Call (612) 543- 6925 to make an appointment. The building will remain locked, but staff will let you in at your appointment time. Masks are required and will be provided if you do not bring one. Because of social distancing, staff will be unable to offer computer assistance. You will have access to a desktop computer, Internet, and printing. You will need to bring your own headphones. At this time, Franklin Library is open for computer use ONLY. Other areas and services, including book/DVD checkout, are not available. They will be accepting returns during staffed service hours. 

Franklin Library Computer Hours 

Tuesday & Wednesday 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. 

Thursday 12-8 p.m. 

Friday & Saturday 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. 

Sunday & Monday ”“ closed 

Franklin Library meal pick-up for youth, Thursdays, Noon-2 p.m. For ages 18 and under. Pick up a week worth of free meals. Caregivers can pick up meals for youth who are not present. Meals include: sandwiches, milk, fruit, vegetable, and snack. 

Connect with the library social worker outside Franklin Library, Wednesdays 9am- 5pm: 

”¢ Basic needs (clothing, food, meals, shelter) 

”¢ Chemical Health 

”¢ Disability Services 

”¢ Education & Employment 

”¢ Hennepin County Benefits 

”¢ Housing 

”¢ A listening ear 

”¢ Mental Health Resources 

”¢ Transportation 

LIBRARY UPDATES: 

Grab and Go Library Service at Hosmer Library: Hosmer Library, 347 E 36th St.,… Read the rest “New Hours for Using Computers”

Tips from a COVID-19 Case Investigator

 By LINDSEY FENNER

 The pandemic has brought into sharp focus all of the inadequacies and inequities of American society. And yet, so many are zoomed in on personal actions and individual rights, based on some blurry idea of “freedom.” While there is much we can each do as individuals to limit risk and exposure to COVID-19, after every single phone call I have with someone who has tested positive, I am struck by the enormous structural failures everyone I talk to has encountered. From testing difficulties, loss of income, confusing communication, mistrust of government, lack of ability to isolate, workplace safety concerns, and on and on, it is clear to me that there is no singular or simple solution to this pandemic. But this doesn”™t mean that there is nothing to be done. 

This is where all of you come in. Vote like your life depends on it, because it does. 

Vote for Federal leadership on masking, PPE production, testing, treatment, and vaccines so that we have all of the tools that we need;

Vote for getting politics out of public health, so that experts at the CDC and other public health agencies can do their jobs without political meddling;

Vote for an Occupational Safety and Health Administration that will enact and enforce coronavirus workplace safety standards;

Vote for meaningful economic support for workers and families who are impacted by the pandemic;

Vote for an increased minimum wage so that our lowest paid workers on the frontline of this pandemic can have economic security;

Vote for unions because we know that unionized workplaces are safer;

Vote for reducing the pollution that leads to higher COVID-19 death rates and more severe illness in people who live or grow up in areas overburdened with pollution (like East Phillips);

Vote for a Green New Deal that will slow down climate change and the habitat loss that would be certain to lead to more new viruses and future pandemics;

Vote to support small local businesses, so they are still standing when the pandemic is over;

Vote for Universal Healthcare so that people can afford lifesaving medical care;

Vote for housing, because you can”™t stay at home when you don”™t have a home;

Vote for more and better affordable housing so that people can isolate and quarantine in less crowded conditions, and lower the risk of the spreading the virus to household members;

Vote for immigration reform, so that undocumented neighborswon”™t fear that they will be deported if they test positive for coronavirus;

Vote for criminal justice reform that would reduce prison populations, because the largest coronavirus outbreaks have been in prisons;

Vote for dismantling systemic white supremacy, because structural racism is an underlying health condition that is killing Black, Brown, and Indigenous neighbors in this pandemic and every day.… Read the rest “Tips from a COVID-19 Case Investigator”

Unsheltered Native People Return to Wall of Forgotten Natives

 By Metropolitan Urban Indian Directors

 2020 there was yet another forced eviction of our homeless relatives, mostly Native American, from publicly owned property within the City of Minneapolis. Unfortunately, there was no solution or direction offered to our homeless relatives as to where to go, and so they were left to fend for themselves. Disbanding an encampment without any viable, safe alternatives for these human beings is wholly unacceptable and in reality, disgusting in its disregard for human life. 

With nowhere to go, and acting out of pure desperation, our relatives have once again returned to the former location of the 2018 mass homeless encampment on MnDOT property at the intersection of Hiawatha and Franklin Avenue – known as the “Wall of Forgotten Natives.”

Due to the inaction and lack of accountability from all levels of government it is shameful that we find ourselves in the very same position as we were in two years ago. This is unacceptable. We demand that our elected officials at the city, county, and state levels respond immediately with a coordinated and adequately funded response to best support our relatives living at The Wall, and all unsheltered people in our city and state. 

In a letter sent on behalf of our community from the leadership of the Metropolitan Urban Indian Directors (MUID) to our City of Minneapolis elected officials on August 27, 2020 we demanded that “…the City must relocate the residents to a location where appropriate security, hygiene facilities and social services can be offered…the City cannot simply clear the encampment only to have it reappear on another property.… Read the rest “Unsheltered Native People Return to Wall of Forgotten Natives”

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