Elvira
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While that might be only a tiny drop in a very large bucket across the region, for the Willmar Police Department, it is a big step forward. Felt said the increased attention came after officers took part in training funded by a grant written by the Kandiyohi County Attorney's Office. The training gave officers more information on human trafficking and what to look for when patrolling the streets. This education has helped them immensely when investigating possible prostitution or human trafficking situations.
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The tellers and bookkeepers were protesting unequal pay and unequal opportunities for advancement. Few outwardly showed support for the strike and the lawyer who took the women's case, John Mack, lost his position as county chair of the Republican Party.

In the summer of the Honorable E. The NLRB declared that the bank was guilty of unfair labor practices, but those practices did not cause the strike. The NLRB ruled that the strike was "economic".

As a result there was no back pay and no guarantee of the women recovering their jobs. Rhoda R. Gilman, the author of The Story of Minnesota's Past observed that "across Minnesota and elsewhere, banks quietly began to make some changes.

The New York Times. Women's eNews. Workday Minnesota.

Archived from the original on Retrieved Gilman The Story of Minnesota's Past. Minnesota Historical Society Press.

ISBN May 3, Organized labor portal. : Labor disputes in the United States labor disputes and strikes Willmar, Minnesota in Minnesota Labor disputes in Minnesota in women's history December events in the United States Quantified groups of defendants.

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