Twin Cities Pride raised more than $71,000 to fill a gap in fundraising after booting Target from the list of festival sponsors. The Minneapolis retailer sparked public outcry with an announcement ...
When Target dropped its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies, Twin Cities Pride dropped them as a sponsor and began fundraising to make up the $50,000 lost from no longer taking Target ...
As Twin Cities Pride continues to fill the financial gap left by uninviting Target from its 2025 events, six Twin Cities co-ops are stepping up. The co-ops — Eastside, Lakewinds, Mississippi ...
Shareholder lawsuits over corporate diversity initiatives have grown more common in recent years, but they're usually filed ...
The lawsuit claims the retailer’s LGBTQ PRIDE campaign hurt the state’s retirement fund, which owns Target stock.
Six Twin Cities food co-ops are donating $28,700 to Twin Cities Pride’s safety fund, helping to close a remaining gap left by the end of the festival’s longstanding partnership with Target.
A group of Twin Cities food cooperatives are giving more than $25,000 to support Twin Cities Pride after the organization decided to part ways with Target as a sponsor. (Jerry Holt/The Minnesota ...
At the end of the day, we all have a story.” Hutchinson gets to take pride in this story. REACH didn’t just pop up out of nowhere. It exists thanks to support from the Hutchinson School Board ...