Notice of Public Hearing for 53rd Avenue RoundaboutAFFIDAVIT OF PUBLICATION
STATE OF MINNESOTA )
COUNTY OF HENNEPIN )
1. (S)He is and during all times herein stated has been an employee of the Star Tribune Media Company
LLC, a Delaware limited liability company with offices at 650 Third Ave. S., Suite 1300, Minneapolis,
Minnesota 55488, or the publisher's designated agent. I have personal knowledge of the facts stated in
this Affidavit, which is made pursuant to Minnesota Statutes §331A.07.
2. The newspaper has complied with all of the requirements to constitute a qualified newspaper under
Minnesota law, including those requirements found in Minnesota Statutes §331A.02.
3. The dates of the month and the year and day of the week upon which the public notice
attached/copied below was published in the newspaper are as follows:
650 3rd Ave. S, Suite 1300 | Mineapolis, MN | 55488
Dates of Publication
Terri Swanson, being first duly sworn, on oath states as follows:
Advertiser Account #Order #
StarTribune 01/26/2023 FRIDLEY CITY OF 1000019971 448389
StarTribune 02/02/2023 FRIDLEY CITY OF 1000019971 448389
$227.52
4. The publisher's lowest classified rate paid by commercial users for comparable space, as
determined pursuant to § 331A.06, is as follows:
5. Mortgage Foreclosure Notices . Pursuant to Minnesota Statutes §580.033 relating to the publication
of mortgage foreclosure notices: The newspaper ’s known office of issue is located in Hennepin County.
The newspaper complies with the conditions described in §580.033, subd. 1, clause (1) or (2). If the
newspaper’s known office of issue is located in a county adjoining the county where the mortgaged
premises or some part of the mortgaged premises described in the notice are located, a substantial
portion of the newspaper ’s circulation is in the latter county.
FURTHER YOUR AFFIANT SAITH NOT.
Subscribed and sworn to before me on:
Notary Public
02/02/2023
In December, there were
about two openings for
each unemployed citizen.
By PAUL WISEMAN
Associated Press
WASHINGTON – U.S. job
openings rose to 11 million in
December, delivering a set-
back to the Fe deral Reserve’s
effort to c ool a hot job market.
Openings rose from 10.44
million in November and
were the highest since July,
according to data released
We dnesday by the Labor
Department. Economists had
expected job openings to d rop
slightly in December.
For 18 straight months,
employers have posted at
least 10 million openings —
a level never reached before
2021 in Labor Department
data going back to 2000.
The number of openings in
December meant that there
were a bout two vacancies for
every unemployed Ameri-
can.
Employers hired 6.17 mil-
lion workers in December,
a jump from 6.03 million in
November.
Still, layoffs a nd discharges
blipped up to 1.47 million in
December from 1.42 m illion in
November. And the number
of Americans quitting their
jobs — a sign they have con-
fidence they can find a better
opportunities elsewhere —
fell slightly in December.
Hotels, restaurants and
bars a ccounted for more than
70% of t he December increase
in job openings.
The American job market
has been surprisingly resilient
throughout this period of e co-
nomic uncertainty.
Employers c reated 375,000
jobs a month in 2022 — sec-
ond most in Labor Depart-
ment records dating back
to 1940 — and likely added
another 185,000 last month,
according to a s urvey o f fore-
casters by the data f irm Fact-
Set. Ja nuary’s hiring numbers
come out Friday.
Hiring has remained strong
even in the face o f rising inter-
est rates, which can increase
costs for businesses. Combat-
ing inflation that last year hit a
four-decade high, the Fe deral
Reserve has hiked its bench-
mark rate eight times since
March, including a hike on
We dnesday.
Fe d policymakers are aim-
ing for a soft l anding — slow-
ing the economy enough to
contain inflation without
causing much economic pain.
One hope was that employ-
ers would cut job openings
— and ease upward pressure
on wages that can feed infla-
tion — and without actually
cutting many jobs.
“With Fe d officials hop-
ing for signs of slowing hir-
ing to support wage growth
deceleration, every data p oint
matters,” said Matthew Mar-
tin, U.S. economist at Oxford
Economics. “The December
report unfortunately offered
the opposite ... showcasing
the stubborn resiliency of t he
labor market.”
Many economists believe
the Fe d rate h ikes will slow the
economy enough to cause a
recession later this year.
Plenty of U.S. j obs are available
2022
11M
U.S. JOB OPENINGS
To tal nonfarm job openings
and labor turnover,
seasonally adjusted.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
0
5
10
15M
DNOSAJJMAMFJD
Commerce Department
report takes closer look
at Big Tech competition.
By FATIMA HUSSEIN
Associated Press
WASHINGTON – The Biden
administration is taking aim at
Apple and Google for operat-
ing mobile app stores that it
says s tifle competition.
The finding is contained
in a Commerce Department
report released by t he admin-
istration on We dnesday as
President Joe Biden convened
his competition council for an
update on efforts to promote
competition and lower prices.
“You’ve heard me say cap-
italism without competition
isn’t capitalism,” Biden said
We dnesday before convening
the meeting, “it is just simply
exploitation,” he said.
And on another compe-
tition front, the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau
was pushing forward with
efforts to limit credit card
late fees.
The report from the Com-
merce D epartment’s National
Te lecommunications and
Information Administration
says the current app store
model — dominated by A pple
and Google — is “harmful to
consumers and developers”
by i nflating prices and reduc-
ing innovation. The firms
have a stranglehold on the
market that squelches com-
petition, it adds.
“The policies that Apple
and Google have in place in
their own mobile app stores
have c reated unnecessary bar-
riers and costs for app devel-
opers, ranging from fees for
access to functional restric-
tions that favor some apps over
others” the report said.
In an op-ed in the Wa ll
Street Journal in January,
Biden called on Democrats
and Republicans to rein
in large tech firms with-
out mentioning Cupertino,
Calif.,-based Apple Inc. and
Mountain View, Calif.,-based
Google LLC by name.
“When tech platforms
get big enough, many find
ways to promote their own
products while excluding or
disadvantaging competitors
— or charge competitors a
fortune to sell on their plat-
form,” Biden said. “My vision
for our economy is one in
which everyone — small and
midsized businesses, mom-
and-pop shops, entrepreneurs
— can compete on a level
playing field with the biggest
companies.”
A representative from
Apple told the Associated
Press that “we respectfully
disagree with a number of
conclusions reached in the
report, which ignore the
investments we m ake in inno-
vation, privacy and security —
all of w hich contribute t o why
users love iPhone and create
a level playing field for small
developers to compete on a
safe and trusted platform.”
And a Google spokesper-
son said the firm also dis-
agrees with the report, namely
“how this report character-
izes Android, which enables
more choice and competition
than any other mobile operat-
ing system.”
A legal battle over app store
dominance is already p laying
out in the courts.
Apple has defended the
area surrounding its iPhone
app store, known as a walled
garden, as an indispensable
feature prized by consum-
ers who want the best pro-
tection available for their
personal information. It has
said it faces significant com-
petition from various alter-
natives to video games on its
iPhones. And Google has long
defended itself against claims
of monopoly.
The Commerce Depart-
ment report said “new legis-
lation and additional antitrust
enforcement actions are likely
necessary” to b oost competi-
tion in the app ecosystem.
Alan Davidson, the NTIA
administrator, told reporters
the report “identifies where
legislation would be needed
to address some of these
issues.”
Biden said that his admin-
istration will work with state
and local officials to identify
ways to crack down on junk
fees in their jurisdictions. He
also called on Congress t o pass
the Junk Fe e Protection Act
that would target hidden fees
in the entertainment, travel
and hospitality industries.
Meanwhile, the White
House said the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau
would move forward with a
proposed rule to limit credit
card late fees, which the
bureau estimates would save
consumers roughly $9 billion
in late fees annually.
Biden’s t eam targ ets app stores
GENE J. PUSKAR • Associated Press
The report says the current app store model is “harmful to consumers and developers” by reducing innovation.
By STAN CHOE
and DAMIAN J. TROISE
Associated Press
NEW YORK – Wa ll Street
climbed We dnesday to its
best level since the summer
following the latest hike to
interest rates by the Fe deral
Reserve, w hich said it’s finally
seeing improvements in infla-
tion.
The S&P 500 rallied back
from an early 1 % loss to r ise 1%
after Fed Chair Jerome Pow-
ell said the economy is on the
path toward getting inflation
lower.
The Dow Jo nes industrial
average erased a drop of 500
points to r ise 6, while the Nas-
daq composite jumped 2%.
Some in the market are not
as optimistic. Another path for
the economy is also possible,
said Rich We iss, senior vice
president at American Cen-
tury Investments: one that
happened during the 1970 s
where inflation reignited after
the Fe deral Reserve let up on
interest rates too soon.
“We’re h eaded into a reces-
sion one way or the other,
whether the Fe d eases up
on the brakes or not,” We iss
said. “So you might as well kill
inflation while you’re d oing it.
I think it’s nonsensical to t hink
the Fed is going to magically
take their foot off at exactly
the right time and slide into a
short and shallow downturn
and the stock market will
come through unscathed.”
One area influencing
expectations for the Fe d is
the job market, which has
remained resilient. While
strength there helps workers,
a worry is that it could lead to
too-high gains in wages that
give inflation more fuel.
Reports on We dnesday
gave a mixed picture on hir-
ing. Private payrolls rose by
106,000 in Ja nuary, according
to ADP. That’s a slowdown
from a month earlier and was
below economists’ expecta-
tions.
But a separate report from
the U.S. government indicated
more strength. It s aid the num-
ber of j ob openings increased
to 1 1 million in December, bet-
ter than expected.
Tr easury yields fell as
Powell spoke, an indication
of e xpectations for an easier
Fe d.
The two-year yield, which
tends to track expectations
for the Fed, fell to 4.11% from
4.21% late Tuesday. The
10-year yield, which helps set
rates for mortgages and other
important loans, fell to 3.42%
from 3.51% late Tuesday.
A lackluster earnings
reporting season also contin-
ues on Wa ll Street, with more
mixed profit reports arriving
from big U.S. companies.
Wa ll St . hits numbers not seen since summer
ZSW [C M Y K]D3 Thursday, Feb. 2, 2023
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2023 BUSINESS STAR TRIBUNE • D3
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:
Self-storage unit contents of the fol-
lowing customers containing house-
hold and other goods will be sold
for cash by CubeSmart 1240 W
98th St.,Bloomington,MN 55431 to
satisfy alien on February 10th 2023
at approx.10:00AM at http://www.
storagetreasures.com :Shawn Irv-
ing Donnelly,Preshawna Scott,Van
Tran,Airizes Miller,Robert Wood-
worth,Shatorria Cobb,Evelin San-
chez,Gloria Vasquez
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:
Self-storage Cube contents of the
following customers containing
household and other goods will be
sold for cash by CubeSmart 4370
Fountain hills Dr Ne,Prior Lake,MN
55372 to satisfy alien on February
10th 2023 at approx.10:30AM at ht
tp://www.storagetreasures.com:
Brody Roehlke ,Bianca Somerville ,
Cody mckinley.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:
Self-storage Cube contents of the
following customers containing
household and other goods will be
sold for cash by CubeSmart,1101
North St.Anoka,MN 55303 to sat-
isfy alien on February 10th 2023 at
approx.12:00 PM at http://www.
storagetreasures.com:Gabrielle
Singleton ,Ephraim SMong’are ,
Caprice RMiller
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:
Self-storage unit contents of the fol-
lowing customers containing house-
hold and other goods will be sold
for cash by CubeSmart 1720 N
Washington Ave.,Minneapolis,MN
55411to satisfy alien on
December16th,2022 at approx.
12:30 PM at http://www.
storagetreasures.com:LYNETTE
TANIMOJO ,Joel MOman ,Julio
Padilla zuniga ,Jaime Muhammad ,
Annalee Mays ,Stacy Rodriguez ,
Sergio Capitaine ,Daniel Reyes ,
Shonte Ward ,Octavia Ross ,
Johnathan Thomas ,Angie Mitchell
,Marie Gomez ,James ANorton ,
Abdul Stewart ,Tiffany Williams
Please publish this ad on January
26th,2023 and February 2nd,2023
Legal Notices
Certificate of Assumed Name
State of Minnesota,Pursuant to
the Chapter 333 Minnesota Stat-
utes:the undersigned,who is or
will be conducting business in the
State of Minnesota under an as-
sumed name,hereby certifies:
1.State the exact assumed name
under which the business is or will
be conducted:Cereset Plymouth
2.State the address of the princi-
pal place of business.3655 Ply-
mouth Blvd Plymouth MN 55664
3.List the name and complete
street address of all persons con-
ducting business under the above
Assumed Name.ALKA Enterprises
LLC 3655 Plymouth Blvd Plymouth
MN 55664
4.Icertify that Iamauthorized to
sign this certificate and Ifurther
certify that Iunderstand that by
signing this certificate,Iamsub-
ject to the penalties of perjury as
set forth in Minnesota Statutes
section 609.48 as if Ihad signed
this certificate under oath.
Dated:01/27/23
(Signed)Ala Lysyk-Smith
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
To satisfy the owner’s storage lien,
PS Retail Sales,LLC will sell at
public lien sale on February 13,
2023,the personal property in the
below-listed units,which may in-
clude but are not limited to:house-
hold and personal items,office and
other equipment.The public sale of
these items will begin at 09:30 AM
and continue until all units are sold.
The lien sale is to be held at the on-
line auction website,www.
storagetreasures.com,where indi-
cated.For online lien sales,bids will
be accepted until 2hours after the
time of the sale specified.
PUBLIC STORAGE #08310,
1144 7th Street S,Hopkins,
MN 55343,(952)225-4291
Time:09:30 AM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
0168 -Dietz,Will;0453 -Dahl,Indi-
go;0711 -Truong,Tan;0747 -
Evans,Clem;9007 -Torbert,Lance
PUBLIC STORAGE #08313,
2825 Hedberg Drive,
Minnetonka,MN 55305,
(952)225-4293
Time:10:00 AM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
0641 -Harris,Mari
PUBLIC STORAGE #08314,
1015 Highway 169 N,
Plymouth,MN 55441,
(763)307-8445
Time:10:30 AM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
0116 -Ludena,Aleaysha;0237 -
Carpet Wholesalers INC.McCarten,
Chris;0306 -Rodriguez-Doerr,Ga-
briel;0335 -HORST,JOHN
PUBLIC STORAGE #08315,
13011 Highway 55,
Plymouth,MN 55441,
(763)325-4085
Time:11:00 AM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
20018 -phillips,markeith;3108 -
Curtis,Amanda;4040 -lezama,
Crystal
PUBLIC STORAGE #08316,
3205 Ranchview Lane N,
Plymouth,MN 55447,
(763)219-1357
Time:11:30 AM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
2111 -Kroll,Anja;2213 -Jensen,
Janice
PUBLIC STORAGE #08318,
19545 Highway 7,Excelsior,
MN 55331,(952)225-4290
Time:12:00 PM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
1143 -Hallman,Teuna
PUBLIC STORAGE #22005,
2300 Winnetka Ave N,
Golden Valley,MN 55427,
(763)219-8516
Time:12:30 PM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
B008 -Holt,selena;B021 -
Hedenland,Tia;B108 -Weeber,Sa-
mantha;B109 -Lewis,Robert;
D013 -schmaedeka,jody
PUBLIC STORAGE #25551,
7301 36th Ave N,New Hope,
MN 55427,(763)290-1727
Time:01:00 PM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
112 -Ericson,Drew;120 -Kelly,
Irene;225 -Martinsen,Kris;365 -
Kimori,Elikanah;504 -McCormack,
Matthew;521 -Mann,Kelly;580 -
Riley,Marcus;668 -Martinsen,Kris
PUBLIC STORAGE #25873,
3200 France Ave S,
St Louis Park,MN 55416,
(952)225-4295
Time:01:30 PM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
2209 -Iker,Jamila;5223 -Ward,
Dorothy ;6339 -Courington,Teara;
6466 -Desnous,Gabby;6539 -
Brown,Ida;9054 -Hinton,Teara
PUBLIC STORAGE #26664,
5040 Winnetka Ave N,
New Hope,MN 55428,
(763)308-4719
Time:02:00 PM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
321 -Wright,Marquita;354 -
Mendez,Monserrat;365 -Atkins,
Felisha;547 -Hayes,Blessing
PUBLIC STORAGE #27391,
8121 10th Avenue North,
Golden Valley,MN 55427,
(763)340-0202
Time:02:30 PM
Sale to be held at www.
storagetreasures.com.
0300 -Goldstein,Adam;1008 -
Manion,Jacqueline;1032 -
Hirschfeld,Alma;1141 -Williams,
Ciera;1279 -Elmore,Loneisha;
2110 -Jackson,Dorice
Public sale terms,rules,and regula-
tions will be made available prior to
the sale.All sales are subject to
cancellation.We reserve the right to
refuse any bid.Payment must be in
cash or credit card-no checks.Buy-
ers must secure the units with their
own personal locks.To claim tax-
exempt status,original RESALE cer-
tificates for each space purchased
is required.By PS Retail Sales,
LLC,701 Western Avenue,Glen-
dale,CA 91201.(818)244-8080.
Mortgage Foreclosures
StorageFacilities
STARTRIBUNE.C OM/CLASSIFIEDS
•612.673.7000 •800.927.9233
CLASSIFIEDS +
PUBLIC
NOTICES
City of Fridley
Notice of Hearing on
53rd Avenue Roundabout
Safety Project
Project No.ST 2023-22
Whereas,the City Council of the
City of Fridley,Anoka County,Min-
nesota has deemed it expedient to
receive evidence pertaining to the
improvements hereinafter descri-
bed.
Now,therefore,notice is hereby
given that on the 13th day of Feb-
ruary 2023,at 7:00 p.m.the City
Council will meet at the Fridley
Civic Campus Council Chambers,
7071 University Avenue,N.E.,
Fridley,MN and will at said time
and place hear all parties interest-
ed in said improvements in whole
or in part.
The general nature of the improve-
ments is the construction (in the
lands and streets noted below)of
the following improvements,to-
wit:
Street and utility improvements,
bituminous asphalt overlay,con-
crete median,concrete curb and
gutter,and utility repairs including
the street segments as follows:
53rd AVENUE from CENTRAL AVE-
NUE (T.H.65)to 1,200 FEET WEST
All of said land and parcels abut-
ting the list of street segments
above are to be assessed propor-
tionately according to the benefits
received by such improvement.
The City Engineer has estimated
the project cost to be $1,221,360.A
tabulation of costs is available at
the City’s Engineering Office.A
reasonable estimate of the impact
of the assessment for each prop-
erty will be available at the hear-
ing.The City Engineer will be
present to describe the physical
and financial impact of the pro-
posed project as described in the
project feasibility report and pro-
posed plans and specifications.
Hearing impaired persons plan-
ning to attend the public hearing
who need an interpreter or other
persons with disabilities who re-
quire auxiliary aids should contact
763-571-3450 no later than the 10th
day of February 2023.
Published:Star Tribune
January 26,2023
February 2,2023
22-115601
NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE-
CLOSURE SALE
THE RIGHT TO VERIFICATION OF
THE DEBT AND IDENTITY OF THE
ORIGINAL CREDITOR WITHIN THE
TIME PROVIDED BY LAW IS NOT
AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,that de-
fault has occurred in the conditions
of the following described mort-
gage:
DATE OF MORTGAGE:July 30,
2012
ORIGINAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF
MORTGAGE:$101,332.00
MORTGAGOR(S):Sue Yang,asin-
gle person
MORTGAGEE:Wells Fargo Bank,N.
A.
LENDER OR BROKER AND MORT-
GAGE ORIGINATOR STATED ON
THE MORTGAGE:Wells Fargo Bank,
N.A.
SERVICER:Wells Fargo Bank,N.A.
DATE AND PLACE OF FILING:Filed
August 16,2012,Hennepin County
Recorder,as Document Number
A9829958
LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPER-
TY:The South 75 feet of the North
225 feet of Lot 25,"Gould’s River-
view Addition,Hennepin County,
Minnesota"
PROPERTY ADDRESS:5706 Bryant
Ave N,Brooklyn Center,MN 55430
PROPERTY IDENTIFICATION NUM-
BER:01-118-21-24-0064
COUNTY IN WHICH PROPERTY IS
LOCATED:Hennepin
THE AMOUNT CLAIMED TO BE DUE
ON THE MORTGAGE ON THE DATE
OF THE NOTICE:$58,063.59
THAT all pre-foreclosure require-
ments have been complied with;
that no action or proceeding has
been instituted at law or otherwise
to recover the debt secured by said
mortgage,or any part thereof;
PURSUANT,to the power of sale
contained in said mortgage,the
above described property will be
sold by the Sheriff of said county as
follows:
DATE AND TIME OF SALE:February
21,2023,10:00AM
PLACE OF SALE:Sheriff’s Main Of-
fice,Civil Division,Room 30,Court-
house,350 South Fifth St.,Minne-
apolis,MN 55487 to pay the debt
secured by said mortgage and tax-
es,if any,on said premises and the
costs and disbursements,including
attorneys fees allowed by law,sub-
ject to redemption within 12 months
from the date of said sale by the
mortgagor(s)the personal represen-
tatives or assigns.
TIME AND DATE TO VACATE PROP-
ERTY:If the real estate is an owner-
occupied,single-family dwelling,
unless otherwise provided by law,
the date on or before which the
mortgagor(s)must vacate the prop-
erty,if the mortgage is not reinstat-
ed under section 580.30 or the
property is not redeemed under sec-
tion 580.23,is 11:59 p.m.on Febru-
ary 21,2024,or the next business
day if February 21,2024 falls on a
Saturday,Sunday or legal holiday.
"THE TIME ALLOWED BY LAW FOR
REDEMPTION BY THE MORTGA-
GOR,THE MORTGAGOR’S PER-
SONAL REPRESENTATIVES OR AS-
SIGNS,MAY BE REDUCED TO FIVE
WEEKS IF AJUDICIAL ORDER IS
ENTERED UNDER MINNESOTA
STATUTES SECTION 582.032 DE-
TERMINING,AMONG OTHER
THINGS,THAT THE MORTGAGED
PREMISES ARE IMPROVED WITH A
RESIDENTIAL DWELLING OF LESS
THAN 5UNITS,ARE NOT PROPER-
TY USED FOR AGRICULTURAL
PRODUCTION,AND ARE ABAN-
DONED.
Dated:December 20,2022
Wells Fargo Bank,N.A.
Mortgagee
LOGS LEGAL GROUP LLP
BY Melissa L.B.Porter -0337778
Gary J.Evers -0134764
Tracy J.Halliday -034610X
Attorneys for Mortgagee
LOGS Legal Group LLP
1715 Yankee Doodle Road,Suite
210 Eagan,MN 55121
(952)831-4060
THIS IS ACOMMUNICATION FROM
ADEBT COLLECTOR
12/29,1/5,1/12,1/19,1/26,
2/2/22 Star Tribune
Certi�cates of Assumed Name
Ad
N
u
m
b
e
r
:
In
s
e
r
t
i
o
n
N
u
m
b
e
r
:
Si
z
e
:
Co
l
o
r
T
y
p
e
:
00
0
0
4
4
8
3
8
9
-
0
1
N/
A
1
C
o
l
x
6
.
3
1
i
n
0
Ad
v
e
r
t
i
s
e
r
:
Ag
e
n
c
y
:
Se
c
t
i
o
n
-
P
a
g
e
-
Z
o
n
e
(
s
)
:
De
s
c
r
i
p
t
i
o
n
:
Ci
t
y
o
f
F
r
i
d
l
e
y
N/
A
D-
3
-
A
l
l
Ci
t
y
o
f
F
r
i
d
l
e
y
N
o
t
i
c
e
o
f
H
e
a
r
i
n
g
.
.
.
Bu
s
i
n
e
s
s
Th
u
r
s
d
a
y
,
F
e
b
r
u
a
r
y
2
,
2
0
2
3