Attorney General Keith Ellison demands court supervision in the sudden closure of the Minneapolis clinic for LGBTQ+ and people with HIV.
Nonprofits + Philanthropy
Though the university isn’t sharing the amount, leaders say it’s the single largest donation ever given to a Minnesota university for scholarships.
The St. Paul-based nonprofit has selected a total of 24 participants for this year’s iteration.
On the precipice of its first blockbuster exhibition in years, the Walker Art Center is reexamining the relationship between art and commerce.
The new women's grant making group earmarked $100,000 to help the Phyllis Wheatley Community Center scale its Women’s Wealth and Equity Building Initiative.
The nonprofit is moving to a notably smaller office on the third floor of Ecolab’s former headquarters in downtown St. Paul.
The billionaire philanthropist’s giving campaign continues, but, unlike previous gifts, the latest round required applications.
The nonprofit children’s mental health provider plans to move about 150 staffers to the facility in downtown Minneapolis.
The LGBTQ+ theater and bar announced plans Wednesday that it will be acquired by the Lush Legacy Fund, a 501(c)3 organization launched last year.
The group's international convention was last held in the Twin Cities in 1974.
Philanthropic work begun by Andrew Dayton now includes long-term research to alleviate poverty.
She succeeds Bill Pohlad in a role previously held only by family members.
A $6.5 million donation from the estate of U of M advertising professor Dr. William D. Wells will fund the museum’s chair of science position.
The local nonprofit will relocate just blocks away from its current space above Mill City Museum.
The nonprofit focused on providing meaningful jobs for individuals with disabilities has found a home in St. Paul’s Highland Village Center.
Penumbra Theatre and Habitat For Humanity are among Minnesota nonprofits to receive huge grants from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott. Big windfalls warrant careful stewardship.
After eight years, the nonprofit-run cafe will close its brick-and-mortar store at 1210 West Broadway as it searches for a permanent home.
Commerce has slowed at the corner where Floyd was murdered three years ago, but community leaders are building out a long-term vision for the neighborhood.