Disputes over equity training programs test relationships ELIZABETH SHOCKMAN, Minnesota Public Radio News July 9, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail PEQUOT LAKES, Minn. (AP) — When Curt Johnson walked into the Pequot Lakes High School gymnasium for a school board meeting in May, he was stunned to see more than 150 people waiting on the bleachers. It was more people than he’d ever seen at a meeting in his 16 years on the board. A school resource officer in uniform stood nearby. Someone had recently threatened on a community Facebook page to rush the podium at the meeting like Capitol rioters had on Jan. 6. Law enforcement was there in case anyone decided to follow through on the threat.