>A group that cheers at alienating half the people who are were at the
meeting 
>last Wednesday will have a tough time finding volunteers and leading them in 
>those projects that need a grassroots component.  Other neighborhoods should 
>look to this as an example to avoid.
Not just that, but if there isn't more unity behind the current board, it
will make it harder for them to reestablish the CNIA as the official voice
for the neighborhood.  

Steve Brandt's story is at:

http://webserv0.startribune.com:80/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisSlug=CNIA21

What the neighborhood associatation should be focusing on is making Central
a better, more livable neighborhood.  Racial polarization will not do that.  

Eva
Eva Young
Mpls., MN

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