Thursday marks Transgender Day of Remembrance, which honors transgender people who lost their lives due to anti-transgender violence. MPR News says dozens of people gathered at the Minnesota State Capitol rotunda to recognize the day. “LGBTQ+ people said the remembrance events carry a different weight this year as changes are introduced in other states and on the federal level designed to attack transgender rights.” How are Minnesota counties spending opioid settlement payouts? Minnesota Reformer reports municipalities are using the funding for treatment, education and addiction recovery support. “Some Minnesota counties spent the cash on law enforcement expenditures intended to weed out drug stashes and bolster criminal investigations: Three spent money on K-9 units, and at least two counties used the funds to pay the salaries of agents investigating drug-related crimes.” A new emergency shelter has opened in Stillwater to help residents experiencing homelessness, The Minnesota Star Tribune reports. They explain the new shelter “is the first of its kind in Washington County and could be a model for other suburbs where such facilities are rare.” You’ll soon notice more autonomous cars on Twin Cities roads. KARE 11 says Waymo is bringing its self-driving vehicles to Minneapolis. “Starting Thursday, a mixed fleet of its Jaguar I-PACE and Zeekr RT vehicles will be visible on Minnesota roads, already with an emphasis on safety as winter looms.”.
https://www.minnpost.com/glean/2025/11/how-minnesotans-are-honoring-transgender-day-of-remembrance/
Tag: municipalities
Jefferson County municipalities pool $2 million for emergency cold weather shelter response
**Jefferson County Addresses Rising Homelessness with Collaborative Cold Weather Shelter Response**
JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colo. — For over a decade, Shelley Long has witnessed the transformative power of community through her work helping countless Arvada residents in need get back on their feet. Long is the pastor and director of REACH at Grace Church Arvada, a program dedicated to supporting community members transitioning to stable housing by providing resources, support, and a shoulder to lean on.
“Just getting to be with the people on the weekends, somebody who knows their name,” said Long. “That next step of somebody being there to encourage them, to chat with them every day. How’s it going, to walk through the discouragement and to celebrate the wins? That’s huge.”
However, the latest numbers from Jefferson County highlight the growing challenges for nonprofits like REACH. According to county leaders, homelessness in Jefferson County increased 27% over the past year, with one in two individuals experiencing homelessness for the first time — the largest jump in the metro area.
This increase comes as the county faces reduced cold-weather shelter availability. “Over the past couple of cold-weather seasons, there were options available for sheltering that we knew were not going to be available this season,” said Jefferson County Regional Homeless Coordinator Kerry Wrenick.
Finding ways to keep the unhoused population safe during the cold-weather months has become a top priority for county leaders throughout the year. “If we serve somebody in Lakewood, it doesn’t mean they’re not going to go to Arvada that evening. We’re all serving the same population, so pooling everything together seems like the most reasonable response — proportionally,” Wrenick added.
In response, Arvada, Edgewater, Golden, Lakewood, Westminster, Wheat Ridge, and Jefferson County recently signed a one-year intergovernmental agreement (IGA) to collaborate on cold weather shelter services for the upcoming winter. Together, they have pooled just over $2 million for emergency sheltering efforts.
This funding will pay for motel vouchers, which will be distributed by homeless navigators 72 hours before severe weather hits. Additionally, if temperatures drop into the single digits or lower, extreme-weather mobile shelters will be deployed at various locations throughout the county.
While the regional winter shelter response aims to address immediate needs, county leaders acknowledge the importance of long-term solutions. “We need a solution to the winter season right now, but we have to have a tangent, longer-term solution for addressing homelessness as a region,” Wrenick explained. “I continue to work with our city and county managers on what that longer-term solution looks like.”
Long praised the collaborative effort among local governments, emphasizing that it is an essential piece in the broader effort to lessen homelessness across the county. “I think the city and county are really trying to put their finger on all of the resources we have here in our area that can work together,” she said. “I’m so glad that they keep working at this. This next step for severe weather—I’m glad that they’re figuring that out.”
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*Watch this story in the video player below.*
https://www.denver7.com/news/local-news/jefferson-county-municipalities-pool-2-million-for-emergency-cold-weather-shelter-response
Private data fills the gap imperfectly as government shutdown halts key economic reports
When a government shutdown halts the release of essential economic data, economists lose the nation’s most reliable gauges of employment, growth, and inflation. But they don’t stop analyzing — they start improvising.
Box office receipts, restaurant reservations, cardboard production, even data on garbage collection can give valuable clues about how American businesses and households are faring, particularly in this time of broad economic uncertainty. While economists agree that none of these can replace the scope and rigor of federal figures, until that official data starts flowing again, analysts are turning to an amalgamation of narrower public and private figures to try to understand economic trends.
“Economists are curious people,” said Allen Bellas, economics and finance professor at Metro State University who directs the graduate program. “And there are benefits of figuring out a good indicator that people might not have thought about before.”
### Impact of the Government Shutdown on Economic Data
When the government shut down on October 1, some of the workers responsible for collecting, analyzing, and publishing the data that informs policy and business decisions also stopped working. Since then, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has not released the planned September jobs report and has delayed the release of the September Consumer Price Index (CPI), a key measure of inflation, from this week to October 28.
The CPI figure is especially important because it is used to calculate the Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) for nearly 70 million Social Security beneficiaries, ensuring their checks keep pace with rising prices.
This federal economic data is considered an important gauge of the broader economic environment. States, municipalities, business owners, investors, and households use it to make investment, employment, and spending decisions. Meanwhile, academics and private-sector economists depend on federal data to inform growth models, predict recessions, and provide quality research upon which others rely.
### Alternative Sources of Economic Data
Researchers have learned over the years that there are alternative indicators they can turn to as measures of past and future economic performance. This approach has been particularly helpful when studying countries without resources for data gathering or where government data manipulation may be a concern. However, historically, researchers have been able to rely on the U.S. for accurate and timely data.
“Most other countries do not have the kinds of data we collect. And the reason we’ve done this is because it benefits our citizens, our taxpayers, our businesses. So they’re the ones that are going to be impacted the most,” said Erin McLaughlin, senior economist at The Conference Board.
### Pandemic Pushed Economists Outside the Box
During the pandemic, the importance of timely data pushed economists to supplement official government figures with real-time data from unconventional sources. Examples include:
– Demand for cardboard boxes
– Pollution data
– Garbage collection data
– State unemployment insurance claim numbers
– Daily airline passenger traffic from the Transportation Security Administration
– Credit and debit card transactions from card companies
– Port and rail activity
– Labor market data from payroll processing companies like ADP and UKG
– Restaurant booking data from OpenTable
– Hotel occupancy rates
– Home listing and sale prices from Zillow and realtors
These indicators helped economists shift from forecasting the future to “nowcasting” — using a wealth of unconventional data to create real-time measures of changing costs, hiring environments, and consumer confidence. This information is crucial for time-sensitive business and household decisions, said George Tawadros, associate professor of economics at Winona State University.
However, while useful in the moment, nowcasting does not provide the holistic economic view needed for longer-term planning.
“Those are good indicators, but they are subsets of what is happening in the economy,” said Marcus Bansah, associate economics professor at St. Olaf College.
### The Indispensable Role of Federal Data
For informed decision-making, economists emphasize the need for a more holistic approach, which requires federal government data. Ming Lo, economics and finance professor at Metro State University, divides federal data into three broad categories:
– Labor market statistics, including unemployment rates and job vacancies
– Output-related data, such as gross domestic product (GDP)
– Price data, such as the CPI inflation index
While private or state-level metrics can capture aspects of these categories imperfectly, the federal data remains essential. For example:
– Labor market data can draw on state unemployment rolls and private firms’ payroll information from ADP, UKG, or job search websites like Glassdoor and Indeed.
– GDP is difficult to measure without BLS data, yet it is vital for businesses making decisions about hiring, production, advertising, or investment.
– Pricing data, particularly inflation, has no true substitute in the private sector.
Moreover, government agencies rely on these metrics to make policy decisions, such as workforce development programs tailored to specific industries.
The social implications are high as well, given that the federal government must send out Social Security checks to nearly 75 million Americans. The amount they receive depends on inflation data, typically measured by the CPI.
“For measures like job openings or unemployment claims, there are reasonably good alternative sources. But for others, the void is much harder to fill. Pricing data, particularly inflation, is a prime example — there’s no true substitute for that information in the private sector,” said Allison Shrivastava, economist at Indeed Hiring Lab.
### Making Best Guesses Amid Data Gaps
Some economists are less concerned about the broader lapse in data releases. While some major headline figures are delayed, other agencies like the Federal Reserve, which is self-funded, continue to publish data.
Paul Kasriel, an independent economist and former Northern Trust chief economist, said he relies heavily on unemployment claims data, which he considers more reliable than the BLS jobs report due to its frequent revisions.
“These data count real people who have an incentive to get in line to collect benefits,” Kasriel explained. Still, he noted that the CPI report is the government data he misses most during this shutdown.
Michael Pearce, deputy chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, believes his firm can still make educated forecasts despite the absence of some official data.
“At this stage, when we’re only missing a month’s data, we’re operating under pretty foggy skies, but we have a pretty good idea of where things stand,” Pearce said. “Relative to other advanced economies, we still have one of the best data systems in the world.”
Economists have been using proxies such as private payroll data, unemployment claims, card transactions, and gasoline demand to model the missing figures, though results are imperfect.
“These private data don’t have the statistical power to tell us if we’re going into a recession,” Pearce cautioned. “The official data serve as the anchor, the benchmark for all these private models.”
He warned that if the shutdown extends for months, the lack of government data could begin influencing critical decisions on Wall Street and at the Federal Reserve.
### The U.S. Statistical System: The Backbone of Economic Analysis
Even though creative alternatives exist, economists agree that the U.S. government’s statistical system remains the backbone of economic analysis.
“Government data is really the gold standard for inflation and it’s needed for markets to function,” said Courtney Shupert, economist at MacroPolicy Perspectives. “There’s no perfect substitute. Many private estimates are benchmarked to government data, especially regional indicators that rely on federal statistics for weighting and sampling.”
Economists also noted that the last government shutdown in 2018-19 did not cause data disruption to this extent, nor did it occur during such a critical economic juncture.
“The last shutdown did not occur during a moment of big change like what we’re seeing lately, which is a decrease in immigration, unemployment ticking up, fewer job openings, and early signs of consumers feeling some pressure,” Shupert said.
These pressures on businesses and households heighten the importance of understanding the current state of the economy, even if the picture is imperfect without federal data.
For now, the shutdown serves as a stress test of the private sector’s data capabilities, and a reminder of how deeply our economic system depends on robust public data sources.
https://www.minnpost.com/economy/2025/10/private-data-fills-the-gap-imperfectly-as-government-shutdown-halts-key-economic-reports/
