Minnesota Senator Eric Lucero banner image

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

 

I hope you had a great Labor Day holiday weekend and the opportunity to enjoy one last hooray with family and friends as summer in Minnesota comes to quick end!

 

With students returning to school this week across the state, young people will be confronted with many new science-denying, extreme mandates passed into law by the Democrats last session and signed into law by Gov. Walz. Among the new mandates by Democrats is the requirement menstrual product dispensers be installed in the boys bathrooms of elementary, middle, and high schools within the next four months (e.g., on or before January 1, 2024).

 

In related news, over this past weekend, local media published a story regarding the student enrollment drop in government schools for three consecutive years. Democrats and Education Minnesota union have been prioritizing pushing government schools toward cesspools of lower living for years. Parents are recognizing the Democrat extreme agenda which warps the minds of children and are responding by removing their children from government schools across the state. If the extreme agenda were not shocking enough, even more shocking is tone deaf bureaucrats are responding with marketing gimmicks rather than recognizing truth and correct the systemic institutional filth which is the root-cause of the enrollment loss.

Another news story published over the weekend related to education also caught my eye. Colleges are having to create various new support mechanisms and other program changes to compensate for the downstream consequences thrust upon young people by Gov. Walz when he shut down K-12 schools in Minnesota. Young people in this group will face cascading social, mental, emotional, financial, career, and other hardships for MANY years as a direct result of Democrats harmfully shutting down schools.

TAXES

Last session, Democrats at the state level passed massive tax hikes. City of Saint Paul Democrats have been discussing local tax hikes all summer long. Now, County level Democrats are demanding tax hikes. Where does it end? HERE A TAX, THERE A TAX, EVERYWHERE A TAX TAX! Democrats are crushing hardworking Minnesotans with their extreme tax-and-spend agenda.

Recently the 'National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators' reached out to Hispanic legislators across the country seeking a bill from each of us for them to highlight at the annual summit. Below was my submission to them:

 

I am submitting to you MN Senate File 946 (attached), which I chief authored this year seeking to clarify religious liberty constitutional protections during emergency declarations.

 

Religious liberty is at the core of our great Republic, protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Despite this truth, the Executive Branch in Minnesota leveraged the excuse of the COVID-19 pandemic to repeatedly infringe on the free exercise of religion. Government edicts were issued to limit the faithful from gathering in houses of worship, mandate how worship services were conducted such as preventing singing, and other coercive tactics including threatening religious leaders with fines or arrest.

 

Government abuse toward those seeking to worship the Creator should never be infringed. In fact, in the successful 2020 lawsuit in which I was co-plaintiff James Carson; Eric Lucero v. Steve Simon, Secretary of State of the State of Minnesota, the United States Eight Circuit Court of Appeals stated “There is no pandemic exception to the Constitution.”

 

The Hispanic community in Minnesota is overwhelmingly Catholic/Christian. But regardless of ethnicity, nationality, or religion, a free people should NEVER be victimized by government infringement of religious worship and the reason I chief authored SF 946.

 

Thank you,

Eric

 

Eric Lucero

Senator

District 30

Rockford Township | Hanover | Saint Michael | Albertville | Otsego | Elk River | Nowthen | Western Oak Grove

 

NEW GALLUP POLL

A recently released Gallup poll shows Minneapolis is rated far less safe by poll respondents than in the past. Minneapolis suffered the 4th largest decrease in perception of public safety of the 16 major cities covered in the poll. In 2006, 73% said Minneapolis is a safe place to live. In 2023, it has dropped 15 points to 58%. This puts Minneapolis on par with other cities quickly deteriorating under Democrat control such as Seattle, San Francisco, and Chicago.

Republicans made several proposals to address crime in the 2023 legislative session. As we watch crime grow in the metro, especially carjackings, here are some of the policies that Democrats ignored.

 

  • Getting tough on crime: Creating new crime of carjacking with increased penalties, increasing penalties for fleeing an officer in a motor vehicle, and increased sentences for offenders with two or more prior violent crimes.
  • Supporting and funding law enforcement: Recruit more officers with Pathways for Policing program,  providing grants to local government to recruit more officers, and creating scholarship programs for officer training.
  • Accountability for prosecutors and judges: Require county attorneys to provide data about felony offenses that go uncharged, creation of a website for the public to research that record the decisions judges make in following sentencing guidelines, and creating public record of when suspects post bail.

COMMUNITY RESOURCE OFFICERS (SROs)

As I’ve highlighted in numerous of my previous communications, Democrats spent the 2023 legislative session ramming through extremist new policies completely ignoring the common sense voices of Republicans and Minnesotans across the state. One of the latest examples garnering headlines involves Democrats having advanced a law that creates unnecessary ambiguity regarding liability SROs may face when protecting students from out-of-control children in the school. We know SROs are very professional and well loved by students, parents, teachers, and school staff. The Democrat attacks on law enforcement professionals extending to SROs is absolutely shocking and uncalled for. As a consequence of the new Democrat law, law enforcement agencies have been pulling SROs from schools. To correct the mess Democrats caused, a special session is needed to change statute. To this end, Republicans are calling on Gov. Walz to call a special session to fix the law he enthusiastically signed a mere handful of months ago. Below is a press release Republicans released last week:

 

ST. PAUL – Legislative Republicans gathered on Wednesday morning to propose a bipartisan bill to fix a recent change in law that is causing the removal of Student Resource Officers (SRO) from public schools. They presented a letter from House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth (R-Cold Spring) and Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson (R- East Grand Forks) asking the Governor to meet to discuss a special session. Also attending the press conference was Blaine Police Chief Brian Podany and Centennial Schools Superintendent Jeff Holmberg who shared their concerns about how this change is impacting safety for students and staff as the school year begins.  

 

“Students, teachers, and school staff are less safe than they were a year ago as a direct result of the loss of school resource officers,” said Rep. Jeff Witte (R-Lakeville). “As a former SRO myself, I know firsthand how important it is to have an officer onsite to respond to challenges, be a resource, prevent problems, and build relationships. SROs play a critical role in keeping our schools safe, and it is unacceptable to be sending our students back to school without this resolved. This is not a time for partisanship or political games—we need a special session to take swift action to get SROs back in our schools and ensure our students and teachers have a safe learning environment this school year.” 

 

Blaine Police Chief Brian Podany was clear that until there is clarity, SROs are not able to do their job as they have been trained. “The varying interpretations have created confusion about how to respond to and manage incidents in our schools. Attorney General Keith Ellison even issued binding guidance in which he indicated that the questions we continue to have are ‘more appropriately directed at the legislature’,” Podany said. “It is hard enough for our educators and our peace officers to manage at times chaotic, violent, and unusual situations involving our children and their safety. Having to navigate the legal confusion surrounding that in a split-second sets up all involved for failure.” Podany said he expects a vote to suspend SROs in the Centennial District as soon as tomorrow.    

 

Centennial School Districts serves Blaine, Centerville, Circle Pines, Lexington, and Lino Lakes families with 6,500 students enrolled from elementary to high school. Holmgren explained the unique role SROs have in the Centennial district, which also educates juveniles incarcerated at Lino Lakes correctional facility. “It is absolutely essential that we have a strong community and school district partnership on issues that impact all of us,” Centennial Schools Superintendent Jeff Holmberg said. “We collaborate regularly with our community safety and law enforcement partners to review safety and security measures and implement our Crisis Management plans to keep our students, staff, and campus’ safe. These efforts will certainly continue but the possibility of not having an SRO to serve as an important liaison to our ongoing efforts and partnership in safety is not a desired outcome for us. The SRO is an integral part of our district’s and community efforts to keep our students, staff, and facilities safe.” 

 

Sen. Zach Duckworth (R- Lakeville) will be Chief Author of the Senate bill to repeal the changed law. “The safety of our kids, teachers, and schools should always come before partisan politics.  Minnesotans expect us to govern responsibly.  Moms and dads count on us to safeguard their children.  The confusion surrounding this law is causing a growing number of School Resource Officers to be pulled out of schools across our state leaving students and staff vulnerable in cases of emergency,” Senator Duckworth said. “I’m calling on the Governor to bring Republicans and Democrats together for a special session before school starts so that we can fix this issue, keep our SROs, and ensure our kids are safe.  The urgency is real, it’s unacceptable to parents that the legislature would wait six months or more to address this.  There’s no time to spare when it comes to protecting our children - let’s show some bipartisanship and put our kids first.” 

 

The bill as proposed simply repeals the recent law change eliminating prone restraints or physical holds and repeals the change to use of force standards to revert back the original language that was in statue. The change does not impact the 2021 bill that banned all neck and chokehold restraints and remains in place for students and all Minnesotans.  

 

So far, at least six police departments have announced they are removing SROs in the last two weeks, including Dilworth and HitterdahlMoorheadRockfordRedwood FallsAndover, and Coon Rapids

 

STAYING IN TOUCH

Each and every day I’m continuously humbled at the opportunity to represent and fight for the values and priorities of our great community!

 

Please contact me to share any issues, concerns, or feedback you have to assist me best represent you. The best way to reach me is by email at [email protected] or by phone at 651-296-5655.

 

Sincerely,

Eric Lucero

 

State Senator

District 30

Rockford Township, Hanover, Saint Michael, Albertville, Otsego, Elk River, Nowthen, Western Oak Grove

 

Capitol Address

95 University Avenue W.
Minnesota Senate Bldg. 2413
St. Paul, MN 55155

651-296-5655