Minnesota will begin accepting cannabis business licenses after months of regulatory delays and legal challenges.
The legislation would exempt school supplies like notebooks, pencils, pens, backpacks, calculators and more from sales tax, ...
The Minnesota Office of Cannabis Management will begin accepting license applications on Feb. 18 through March 14. Both social equity and general ...
Trump presidency brought no shortage of reasons to fear for the many public goods and services that we all rely on. It’s scary, but an unpredictable federal government underscores the state’s ...
The Biden administration has reversed a much-criticized policy that required inspectors to revoke the federal firearms sales licenses for gun shops over certain paperwork errors or anomalies as ...
Among Gov. Tim Walz’s roughly $66 billion budget is something he says has never been done in Minnesota: cut the state’s sales tax. “For the first time in Minnesota history, reducing the ...
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called for spending cuts Thursday in a $65.9 billion two-year budget proposal that includes a modest reduction in the overall state sales tax but new taxes on services like ...
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's proposed budget offers the first-ever cut to Minnesota's sales tax rate — but it would also expand the tax into new professional services. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's ...
Budget would lower tax to 6.8%, add professional services New unit would audit complex partnerships, attack loopholes Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz proposed a small cut to the statewide sales tax rate with ...
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz spoke about his two-year budget on Thursday in St. Paul. (Jerry Holt/The Minnesota Star Tribune) ...
If approved, the rate reduction would be the first sales tax cut in Minnesota's history ... could result in a driver’s license revocation. That’s a penalty now for people caught at speeds ...
Lower-than-expected sales and income tax projections into the future along with higher spending for long-term care and special education have led to the concern over Minnesota’s finances.