There's a $4 million word on a sign at Fort Snelling.
Bdote. The Dakota name for this spur of land at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers. A word that brings 10,000 more years of history and culture to the 200-year story of the historic fort and the people who served, lived and died there.
But to some Minnesota lawmakers, revising a sign to welcome visitors to Historic Fort Snelling at Bdote was tantamount to revising history.
If the Minnesota Historical Society was going to revise history, then the Minnesota Senate was going to revise $4 million right out of its budget.
"The Historical Society," state Sen. Mary Kiffmeyer, R-Big Lake, announced during Tuesday's Senate Finance Committee hearing, "has become highly controversial."
Hollowing out the historians' $11 million operating budget could cost as many as 80 Minnesotans their jobs, slash school programs and force museums and historical sites to scale back their hours or close entirely.
Kiffmeyer, author of the cuts, refused to explain to her confused colleagues why she wanted to eviscerate the Minnesota Historical Society — archiver of Minnesota stories, keeper of Minnesota treasures, patient guide to Minnesota genealogists and general recipient of bipartisan legislative goodwill.
"What have they done?" asked Sen. Richard Cohen, D-St. Paul, who offered an amendment to restore the funding.