Inauguration

racheleggert

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Today I attended two inauguration ceremonies... First was in Minneapolis then second was in St. Paul ( I was invited to one more tonight at last minute but can't find interpreter at last minute).... Have anyone here in AD gone to one of ceremonies in their hometown or states?

I have been attending the ceremonies since 1999, 258 because it have different people (sometimes same, like this year we have same person from 4 years ago). Inauguration is Political New Year or families and friends welcoming new leaders.

This saturday St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman will have dance and dinner but the cost is $100, YIKES!!! It's out of my price range but Minneapolis Mayor RT Rybak told me that he will have one later this month and is trying to make it more affordable. I have gone to two Inaugural balls because they were affordable.
 
Inaugural Address of the Mayor of the City of Minneapolis R.T. Rybak

Tuesday, January 3, 2006

Senator Dayton, fellow council members, and friends, welcome. I’d like to begin by recognizing and thanking my family who is with me today and who has supported me.

Four years ago we came together in this rotunda to celebrate a new era in City Hall. We stood in the same place but in many ways, both good and bad, it was a different world.

Four years ago the Sears Building, which has come roaring back to life, was vacant and four years ago construction had just begun on the Hiawatha Light Rail Line that has now changed so much of our city. A promising young woman named Tyesha Edwards was on her way to Powderhorn School and a police officer named Melissa Schmidt was patrolling the halls of Horn Towners. And four years ago at that celebration, sitting up there in the balcony where we have left two vacant chairs today, were Senator Paul and Sheila Wellstone.

It was the wake of 9/11 and we were only beginning to understand what that tragedy would mean to our economy, our liberty and our freedoms. We stood before you as a new Mayor and a City Council with seven new members, ready for the future but unsure what it would bring. And it brought far greater challenges than we expected. I believe the work that has taken place in this building in these past few years will pass the test of time. I believe history will see that as each new challenge came our way, we found the strength to resist short term gain to instead make the tougher structural choices that will pay off over time.

We did not try to hide the choices from our citizens and the people of Minneapolis rewarded us by sending us back here with their trust.

We have shown that public officials can be public stewards. We have made it possible for the next generation to inherit the hopes of the future, not the unsolved problems of the past.

The values that led us through tough times should always be at the center of our work. They are also the values that have laid the groundwork for an ambitious agenda that will allow Minneapolis to rightfully claim its place as the Great American City of our time. And we should settle for nothing less.

Our ambitious agenda starts with the most basic of principals: That local government is first and foremost about those basic core services that touch and transform peoples lives every day. Public safety and the other core services come first and we will deliver them with efficiency and in deep partnership with our citizens.

We believe in government, and we will run this government well, but we need to run it for a reason. This government will deliver a good value to our citizens, and we will do that by being a government with values.

Those values are clearer to me today than ever. Having led this city for four years, and campaigned through it twice, I know that three key values underlie all of our work. We must:

• Close the gaps between haves and have-nots.

• Reweave the urban fabric.

• And lay the groundwork for the next generation.

The first of those values -- closing the gaps -- is the most important because the story of this period in Minneapolis cannot be a tale of two cities. While billions of dollars of investment are lifting most of this city, parts of Minneapolis are falling further behind. Crime is worse, unemployment is higher, heath and education disparities are growing. Where there is disproportionate need, we need to make disproportionate investment. We have proven in the Phillips neighborhood, where a once-distressed area is now creating more jobs than any other part of the state, that investment in areas in need in Minneapolis pays off tenfold.

Our second core value should be to recognize that we are not just here to grow the city but to weave it together, to restore the fabric that differentiates a great city from just another housing development or office park or shopping center. The New Minneapolis will not be about just housing, or jobs or transportation in isolation. The New Minneapolis will be organic, an integrated collection of sustainable urban villages with quality jobs and stores within walking distance of our homes. Where transit supports our commercial corridors and the economy grows BECAUSE we are stewards of the greatest natural environment of any city in America. To reweave the urban fabric we have to govern beyond the silos that often isolate our work. If we do it right we can create a way of life in Minneapolis unmatched by any other city in America.

The third key value should be to aggressively lay the ground work for the next generation to succeed. Minneapolis’ next generation truly needs us now. Too many lack hope, too many lack purpose, too many lack strong families, and too many have responded to all that by turning to crime. Over the next few weeks I will be part of a series of announcements that will bring together the broad partnerships we need to give our children the direction and resources they need to succeed. As we do that we need to remember that our kids create challenges, but they are also our greatest asset, and that is especially true of their diversity. No doubt it is more complex to raise a generation when they come from so many different cultures but we need to join our partners in the business and civic community in carrying this message: As Minnesota struggles to compete in an increasingly global economy, this state’s single greatest asset is the children of the next generation of Minneapolis, who already speak more than 80 languages, come from all over the world, and spend every day crossing cultural boundaries.

So these are our values: Put public safety and other core services first; close the gaps between haves and have-nots; reweave the urban fabric; and lay the groundwork for the next generation.

None of this will be easy. We will once again be governing in a period of diminished resources. But within this City Hall, where so much of our recent work has been about limits and scarcity and sacrifice, we also cannot forget to dream.

This city of big dreams had the vision to create the greatest urban park system in America. This is the city where small riverfront mills grew to into corporate giants. Where the dream of starting a regional theater sparked Minneapolis’ cultural explosion, helped drive our creative economy, and became a national leading institution. This city has risen above the fear that grips too much of our county, as a place where immigrants and the GLBT community are fusing together cultures that together are better than anything we create on our own.

This city on the edge of the prairie has always looked to the horizon for inspiration.

Four years ago when I spoke to you I asked you to take a walk around the city I love. Today I ask you to once again take that walk with me, only this time, close your eyes and imagine it a few years in the future:

Imagine a city where we can walk safety down every single street and where prosperity reaches every corner. Imagine a city where world class schools, parks, libraries and cultural institutions are integral parts of our daily life. Where you can take a streetcar, or a bike or even walk to great jobs and stores nearby. Imagine a city where every kid grows up knowing they can succeed.

One city. One people. Woven together. Working today for tomorrow.

Now open your eyes and roll up your sleeves. It’s time to build the New Minneapolis.
 
New St. Paul mayor takes office


Pioneer Press

At noon today, former City Council Member Chris Coleman formally took office as St. Paul's 45th mayor, calling for a new era of change based on "cooperation, responsibility and respect."
In inaugural ceremonies at Landmark Center, Coleman, 44, said: "We as a country are immersed in a climate of fear — fear of the future, fear of the unknown, fear of people different from ourselves. This fear is the enemy of our natural cooperative spirit because it drains away hope, saps energy and builds suspicion and distrust.

" . . . As we seek to move St. Paul forward to create opportunity for all citizens, and to replace fear with cooperation, the fulcrum upon which we initiate change must be built of three core values: cooperation, responsibility and respect."

The official swearing-in ceremony kicked off a full day of inaugural activities, which include an open house at City Hall from 2 to 5 p.m., a reception at the College of St. Catherine from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and a reception at the Minnesota Humanities Center from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Inaugural events continue through Friday.

Here is the full text of Coleman's remarks:

I want to begin by thanking my wife, Connie, and our children, Molly and Aidan, and each and every one of you who have been a part of bringing us to this day.

It is my special honor to have been sworn in by Doris Huspeni, for whom I clerked on the Court of Appeals.

I want to thank my friends and mentors, George and Nancy Latimer.

And, on behalf of all of us, I extend a heartfelt thank you to Mayor Randy Kelly for his many years of dedicated service to the citizens of St. Paul.

Many years ago, perhaps in this very building, Hannah Kennedy, a young Irish immigrant, raised her right hand and swore allegiance to her new country. Today, as her grandson, I raise my right hand for a different purpose, to swear allegiance to this city, to its people and to the responsibilities of this office. For generations, St. Paul has been the city my family has called home.

I am proud. I am humbled. I am very grateful.

There are many ways to describe this city:

A city of neighborhoods. A historic city. A city of hills.

From those hills, we can see many things: fireworks at Taste of Minnesota; Aztec dancers during Cinco de Mayo; the carousel at Como Park; our many colleges and universities.

We see the great and growing cultural diversity of our city. We can also see our history. From Cap Wigington's water tower in Highland Park to this beautiful building, we are reminded of the wonders of St. Paul's past and mindful of how it shapes our future.

And from those hills, we see that a river runs through it.

But the great Mississippi is not merely a body of water. As it carved its way through St. Paul, the landscape it left behind literally shaped what St. Paul was to become and how we define ourselves as a community.

The stories of the men and women that lived on the Flats, the levee or in Swede Hollow are the stories of the creation of this city. They are colorful. They are powerful. And they are still present.

I have a drawing, given to me by my brother Nick, of the first bridge across the Mississippi, connecting downtown to the West Side. Bridges are a frequent and strong metaphor. But they do more than connect one side of the river to the other. They connect us to each other.

They connect us to the future.

They connect us to our hopes . . . our potential . . . and our power.

There is no greater bridge than the bridge of opportunity. An opportunity is the bridge between where you are and where you want to go. While many of us already have walked across this bridge, there are too many of us who cannot yet even dream of crossing it. If we are to be the city that we all want St. Paul to be, this is the bridge we must begin building today.

Ours is a city built on opportunities seized . . . promises realized . . . and dreams turned into reality.

But now, we as a country are immersed in a climate of fear — fear of the future, fear of the unknown, fear of people different from ourselves. This fear is the enemy of our natural cooperative spirit because it drains away hope, saps energy and builds suspicion and distrust.

Long ago, Archimedes, the inventor of the lever, said this: "Give me a place to stand and I will move the world." As we seek to move St. Paul forward to create opportunity for all citizens, and to replace fear with cooperation, the fulcrum upon which we initiate change must be built of three core values:

Cooperation, Responsibility and Respect.

Cooperation is necessary to create and sustain opportunity.

In St. Paul's past, we have seen many instances of cooperation across cultural and economic lines. In the Thirties, when Minneapolis faced great labor unrest, there was an understanding between business owner and worker that cooperation between employer and employee was the St. Paul way.

While in other cities, people were denied membership in clubs and organizations based on race or religion, St. Paul was a more inclusive city.

In our own past, we can see that cooperation beats fear.

After World War II, John Nasseff, the son of poor Lebanese immigrants who lived on the West Side Flats, got a job on the loading docks at West Publishing. He developed an idea to improve shipping procedures and boldly marched into the CEO's office and told him about it. The CEO liked it and worked with John to implement it. That collaboration was good for West Publishing and good for John Nassef, who eventually rose into the ranks of St. Paul's most prominent citizens.

More recently, a local company called WTC (Water Treatment Co.) struggled to stay open. The company began producing filtration equipment to go into refrigerators and landed contracts with Maytag, Amana and, eventually, General Electric. Their contract with GE called for higher standards of precision, quality and expertise.

The task of meeting these standards fell to a group of Hmong employees — many of whom spoke little English. Their work had to be both fast and perfect. It was, and the orders rolled in. As the company's success grew, more Hmong workers were hired.

But the leaders of the company did not want an all-white front office and an all-Asian work force, so they began to promote Hmong workers into positions of management. With this new partnership, the company flourished and eventually became a part of 3M.

Being inclusive, cooperating across cultural and economic divides, is no longer optional. We must practice inclusion not simply because it is morally right, but because it is good business. It is a practice deeply rooted in St. Paul's history.

While cooperation is central to our future, we cannot move our community forward unless we all acknowledge the responsibility that we share. As mayor, I will lead our efforts, but I cannot move this city forward unless all of you are prepared to stand with me in this effort.

Whether it is reversing the growing disparity in graduation rates between white kids and kids of color, haves and have-nots, or getting to work on the extensive planning that must occur to make the Central Corridor a success, or tackling important issues like global climate change, we must all examine the roles that we will play.

The importance of education cannot be overstated. The greatest gift we can give to the young people of St. Paul is the ability to see a successful future, a future unburdened by apathy and despair, but rich in opportunity and hope.

And yet far too many children are not getting the education they need to reach their full potential. Our schools and teachers struggle to meet this challenge.

We must step up and play our part as a community.

That is why, on December 10th, over 300 people gathered with me at John A. Johnson School to participate in the Second Shift Summit.

And that is also why I look forward to the upcoming announcement of a program called "The Power of You" — a collaborative initiative between our community colleges and the Minnesota Business Partnership — that aims to increase high-school graduation rates for students of color and allow students to attend the first two years of college, free of charge.

Together, we have accepted responsibility and we will make a difference.

The late Congresswoman Barbara Jordan remarked that "the stakes are too high now for government to be a spectator sport." That is clearly true today more than ever. The city that I lead and the thousands of dedicated public employees will work tirelessly to make sure that opportunity is created for all in this community. But government cannot do it alone.

All of us have a role to play.

Whether it be for a small business to grow larger, a working family to buy a home, or a young child to reach her potential.
 
Rest of Coleman's speech

We cannot be spectators.

The value that will make all of this possible is respect. It begins with a spirit of graciousness, fairness, patience and civility in our daily life. Without these things, all manner of opportunity is undermined.

Respect is shown not always by what we do. Rather, it is shown in how we do things.

A half-century ago, bulldozers leveled one of the most vibrant communities in St. Paul, home to a majority of our African-American residents. In 1927, civil rights leader Roy Wilkins wrote this of his native Rondo: "The colored people of St. Paul live in one of the city's best locations. It is near the downtown shopping area, it is convenient to both cities. . . . It has streets well-lined with beautiful trees. . . . It has excellent transportation which makes it ideal for business."

"Rondo Avenue itself," he added, is "a riot of warm colors, feelings and sounds. . . . Music is in abundance from victrolas, saxophones, player pianos and hurry-up orchestras. . . . It seethes with the pulsating beauty of the lives of its people."

When we built the freeway through this community, it was done without respect for the people that built Rondo and called it home.

It is obvious that the freeway had to go somewhere. It is hard to imagine the city without it. But imagine what might have been had we respected the strength and history of Rondo. What could we have created if, while building the freeway, we sought to strengthen all parts of the city — not just some at the expense of others?

Perhaps that riot of warm colors, feelings and sounds could still be with us. Perhaps those who were displaced and still feel the pain would understand that they live in a community that truly values them.

As we build new roads or buildings, let us respect those whose lives we affect by such decisions. Though the citizens of Rondo did not have a voice in the decision to put a freeway through their neighborhood, those impacted by the creation of light rail in the Central Corridor will have a seat at the table. We will build this corridor, but we will respect those whose are touched by this effort.

The developers, the big business owners, the small merchants, leaders from the faith community, educators and people who simply love their neighborhood will be included. They will be listened to and heard, with patience and respect.

There is perhaps no greater opportunity in St. Paul then the development of the central corridor. Nearly a billion dollars of private and public money will go into this project over the next decade. When completed, it will be a corridor of opportunity — a bustling, colorful consortium of new housing, environmentally friendly transportation, small and large businesses, and rich in diversity. We will be connected in a new way to our Twin City.

The connection between Minneapolis and St. Paul must grow. The challenges we face are no longer confined to one city or the other. Affordable housing, transportation, environmental concerns and economic development must be viewed from a more comprehensive perspective. I welcome the opportunity to work with Mayor Rybak to help our entire community grow together.

St. Paul will be strengthened by this relationship, not diminished. And though we must be sure that St. Paul is strong, we will get there through cooperation, not competition.

As I stand here today, my thoughts return to the great river that runs below the bluffs of St. Paul. Norman MacLean, in his story "A River Runs Through It," connects the Blackfoot River in Montana to his history and his family. He writes:

"The river was cut by the world's great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time.

On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops . . .

and under the rocks are the words . . .

and some of the words . . . are theirs."

Here in St. Paul, the words to be said and the deeds to be done on the banks of this river are ours now — they will be words and deeds marked by Cooperation, Responsibility and Respect.

Where some see problems, we will see possibilities. We will align our policies with our values and transform our challenges into opportunities.

Our city will be worthy of the love we feel for it.

This has been the story of St. Paul's past, it is our story today, and it is a story we will carry proudly into the future.

Thank you.
 
racheleggert said:
Today I attended two inauguration ceremonies... First was in Minneapolis then second was in St. Paul ( I was invited to one more tonight at last minute but can't find interpreter at last minute)...QUOTE]

If you need an interpreter, get in contact with me, and I will see if my wife is available. dfsupply@juno.com

Trent
 
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