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HOUSING

The consultants will work six to 14 hours each month for the next few months, at a rate of $50 per hour.
The last piece of the contract puzzle for Park Rapids High School additions and renovations was put in place on Tuesday, Feb. 21.
Plans for 58 units of workforce housing in the Career Path neighborhood may depend, in part, on the Park Rapids Area Schools' buy-in.
The proposals called for expanding affordable health care by establishing a MinnesotaCare public option and more than a billion dollars in affordable housing proposals over the next four years.

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Akeley City Clerk Kristi Kath said the HRA needs to present the city with a resolution that they are transferring all funds, estimated to be approximately $13,700, at the February council meeting.
The Heartland Lakes Development Commission sought feedback from the Park Rapids Economic Development Authority on Jan. 10 regarding the city's role in developing 58 new housing units.
In partnership with Hubbard County and the city of Park Rapids, the Heartland Lakes Development Association has proposed constructing a 58-unit housing development, costing an estimated $6,963,911.
The rental near U.S. Highway 61 shares fictional moments in Winona’s history: a giant squid in East Lake Winona, Bigfoot’s enjoyment of Bloedow Bakery, robots defeating aliens at a Sugarloaf Intergalactic Gas Station and a secret NASA base at Video Vision.
Built in 1924, the 93-cell jail was designed to hold up to 100 inmates. Now the historic building in Duluth is expected to welcome its first voluntary tenants come January.
Mary Thompson with the Heartland Lakes Development Commission (HLDC) said they have grant money available to help child care providers with training and startup costs.

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On Tuesday, the Hubbard County Board of Equalization followed the county assessor’s recommendation of “no change” because no factual deficiencies or discrepancies were brought forth during the appeals process. There were only two exceptions.
More than 100 landowners appealed their estimated market values.
“From an economic development standpoint, housing really is the 500-pound gorilla,” Mary Thompson, executive director of The Heartland Lakes Development Commission (HLDC), told county commissioners Tuesday, May 11.

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