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Minneapolis-St. Paul’s 88-degree day breaks record for hottest April 12

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The Twin Cities broke a record Wednesday for the hottest April 12, continuing an unexpected stretch of summerlike warmth after Minnesota received snow less than two weeks earlier.

The thermometer reached 88 degrees by 5:15 p.m. at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, breaking the record of 83 degrees set in 1931, according to the National Weather Service.

The rest of the workweek is expected to stay warm, with highs in the mid-80s Thursday and low 80s Friday, according to Weather Service meteorologist Bill Borghoff.

The dry heat and high winds have led the Weather Service to declare a “fire weather watch” for central, south and southeast Minnesota. The watch is in effect from Thursday afternoon through Thursday evening.

The record highlights what has been a dramatic swing in weather compared with a week ago, when the Twin Cities was struggling to reach 50 degrees for the first time since fall.

Minnesotans have a short window to enjoy the heat, as a cold front is expected to move in Friday night. Temperatures will drop to the low 50s by Saturday, Borghoff said.

The cold front will bring a round of rain to the area, and there’s a chance it will turn to snow by early Sunday morning. If the forecast low of 35 degrees holds up Saturday night, any snow wouldn’t accumulate, but if the temperature drops lower that could change.

“If it does drop below freezing Saturday night and it’s still snowing, there could be some minor accumulation, mostly on the grass,” Borghoff said.



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Patrol IDs driver critically hurt after hitting Iron Range school bus

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The Minnesota State Patrol has identified the motorist whose SUV hit a school bus taking kids to their Iron Range school.

The patrol said 19-year-old Svea Lynn Snickers, of Alborn, Minn., ran a stop sign at the intersection and hit the bus as it headed north on Hwy. 5. She was last reported to be in critical condition.

The collision occurred just east of Hibbing about 7:50 a.m. Thursday at the intersection of Hwy. 5 and Town Line Road, according to the State Patrol.

All 21 children heading to Cherry School suffered minor injuries when the bus flipped over about 7 miles southwest of its destination, the patrol said. The school serves about 600 students from pre-kindergarten through 12th grade, and students of all ages were on the bus, said St. Louis County Schools Superintendent Reggie Engebritson.

A witness told Hibbing police that students were able to crawl out of the bus on their own.

Snickers suffered critical injuries, was extricated from the wreckage by emergency responders and taken by air ambulance to Essentia Hospital in nearby Virginia, according to police.

The bus driver, 52-year-old Shawn Allen Lindula, of Iron, Minn., was expected to survive his injuries.

Star Tribune staff writer Jana Hollingsworth contributed to this report.



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St. Louis Park requires landlords to give tenants more notice before eviction

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St. Louis Park will soon require landlords to give renters more notice before they file for evictions over late payments.

The city currently requires landlords to give tenants notice seven days before they file for eviction. Starting in November, landlords will have to give 30 days notice and use a form prepared by the city.

“This is a tough ordinance,” Council Member Lynette Dumalag, the only person to vote against the change, said during a meeting this week. “At least for me, personally, I felt that it pit those that care about affordable housing against one another.”

In public hearings and other forums, city leaders heard from renters who said the current requirements didn’t give them enough time to scrape together payments if they face a sudden hardship, such as losing a job. They also heard from at least one landlord who said he might have to increase deposits because he already struggles to make ends meet when renters fall behind on payments.

The change passed 4 to 1. Council Member Tim Brausen and Mayor Nadia Mohamed were absent.



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Park Rapids mayor resigns, vacancy declared

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PARK RAPIDS, Minn. — Ryan Leckner has resigned as Mayor of Park Rapids and the city council has officially declared a vacancy.

City Administrator Angel Weasner said councilmembers will hold a workshop on Sept. 24 to determine how to proceed. They can fill the vacancy by appointment or hold a special election, which Leckner said seems unlikely given that the November general election is just around the corner.

Until then, Leckner said “we’re thinking that we’ll just be able to get by with just one less council member.”

He added that Councilmember Liz Stone would likely serve as acting mayor until voters hit the polls.

Former Park Rapids Mayor Pat Mikesh is running uncontested for Leckner’s now-vacant seat.

In 2018, Mikesh stepped down a month before the election and Leckner successfully ran as a write-in candidate.

Leckner first joined the council in 2015 and is ending his third, two-year term as mayor early because his family built a home outside city limits. Construction of the home in Henrietta Township, and the sale of his existing home in Park Rapids, all happened faster than expected, he said.

“My term was up in November anyways,” he said, “so I was kind of planning on just not running.”



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