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Twin Cities Marathon canceled due to heat, ‘extreme and dangerous conditions’

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Twin Cities Marathon officials canceled the race early Sunday from Minneapolis to St. Paul when the threat of heat — with forecasted record highs in the 80s, humidity and cloudless skies — was deemed too dangerous for participants.

As many as 8,000 runners were set to compete in the 42nd running of the marathon, with 12,000 more in the TC 10 Mile, and thousands of spectators on the streets of both cities.

Sunday’s weather forecast elevated the races into black-flag status (“extreme and dangerous conditions”), prompting their cancellation.

The marathon has never been canceled because of the weather, but the heat has been a factor. At the time, the 2007 event was the warmest in the race’s history, at 74 degrees with 87% humidity at the 8 a.m. start. Several runners needed medical assistance. That same day the Chicago Marathon canceled its race hours into the event, owing to the conditions. About 300 runners were taken to hospitals.

In an e-mail to runners in the wee hours Sunday, race organizers said “the latest weather forecast update projects record-setting heat conditions that do not allow a safe event for runners, supporters and volunteers.”

TCM notified runners for both races over e-mail at about 8:30 Saturday night that it still was monitoring the weather and would update them Sunday morning. That update came at about 5:30 a.m. Sunday morning: The races were canceled.

Charlie Mahler, TCM communications manager, told the Star Tribune later Sunday morning that race officials monitored the weather overnight, even meeting at 2 a.m. with the National Weather Service (NWS).

“We would have loved to say the race was a go [Saturday night], but we couldn’t say that definitively,” he added, regarding the communication to runners in both races.

He said race organizers met again at 2:30 a.m. and saw that the forecast “was a little bit worse.” The NWS projected a high of 91 at one point Sunday morning.

“Our race directors and medical directors met and decided shortly before 5:30 [a.m.] that, no, we just can’t be certain that we can put on a safe race with what the situation is,” he added.

Twin Cities in Motion (TCM), organizers of the event, had telegraphed the concern earlier in the week when the races were considered red-flag conditions — extreme caution for runners. When race conditions are deemed to have reached black-flag status, the recommended action is to cancel the event.

In its e-mail to all marathon and 10-mile runners Saturday night, TCM said “if canceling the race is required based upon our best practices and safety protocols in light of weather conditions, it is a decision we will make at any time conditions dictate. You can expect another update on status of the events by 5:30 a.m. Sunday, October 1.”

The overnight low Saturday was in the high 60s, with a Sunday midday high near 89 with mostly sunny skies, according to the National Weather Service.

NWS meteorologist Caleb Grunzke said the overnight revision to the forecast was slight, but it was enough to tip into the marathon organizers’ “black flag” warning. After record-setting heat on Saturday, Grunzke said, the high temperature was set to reach 90 on Sunday. Sunday was also unusually humid, he said.

TCM organizers use a metric called “wet globe bulb temperature,” Grunzke said, which takes into account temperature, humidity, sunlight and wind. The wet globe bulb temperature was forecast to reach 80 degrees Sunday, he said.

“It’s very difficult for the body to cool itself during strenuous activity” with such heat, humidity and direct sun. “You run the risk of runners overheating, collapsing, and medical attention not getting to them quickly enough.”

Mahler said TCM has to consider all runners, in a race day that could extend into early afternoon for marathoners in the elements.

“We are considering everybody, from the person who is going to break the tape to the person who is at the bottom of the results page,” he added.

He said “operationally” TCM couldn’t run the 10 mile and not the marathon.

TCM said it will communicate about “possible credit” for runners by the end of the day Thursday.

TCM race organizers were busy Sunday morning connecting with runners, and partners, volunteers and others who help put on the races.

“We’re trying to get runners and volunteers back to where they need to go, and then take down everything we built for the event,” said Mahler earlier.

Some runners carry on

Some TC 10 Mile runners turned up on the Capitol grounds, the finish area for both races, to collect their gear drop bags from TCM volunteers.

Runners near the start area for both races had a mix of reactions. Some planned to get a run in anyway.

“I came down here and it looked awfully quiet,” said Rob Kurak of Lino Lakes.

“I’ll go for a run along the river,” he added. “I don’t get down that often.”

“I’m a little sad,” said Rebecka Lassen of St. Louis Park. She was warmed up and ready to go, knees covered in kinesiology tape, or “KT.” But she said she was already feeling warm, and understood the race organizers’ caution. “People aren’t always the best decision-makers. Especially us athletes,” Lassen said.

Matt Mousel and Alex Rongstad of Eau Claire, Wis., were trying to figure out what changed to cancel the races. After a week of red-flag heat warnings, why change to black on the morning of the race? “Of course I’m not a meteorologist but being a runner I pull up the weather every single day,” Mousel said.

After training through the summer he had been prepared for the heat. “A lot of the mornings were a lot warmer than this,” Mousel said.

Rongstad said he wondered about the runners who spent hundreds or thousands of dollars to fly in for the races. “With the marathon distance it’s good to take precautions because, man, it can be a real dire situation in the heat.”

Rongstad and Mousel planned to run to St. Paul anyway.

A race official in a neon yellow vest yelled a warning for runners. There would be no water stations and no medical support.

“You’re just entirely going out for a run on your own.”

In the west metro, the popular Luce Line trail was busy with runners early Sunday morning, some of them loaded up with water bottles and other long-run gear, perhaps on replacement runs. Several even wore their marathon or 10-mile race bibs.

Mill City Running, a Minneapolis running shop that supports a race team and coordinates weekly training, lamented the cancellation but posted on X (formerly Twitter) that TCM made a “very difficult but correct decision.”

“We’re gutted for our teammates and all members of the running community that were scheduled to race today, but fully support Twin Cities in Motion’s decision to cancel the 10 Mile and Marathon.”

Mahler, of TCM, said he and many of his colleagues are runners, too.

“We feel that pain, and we don’t take that lightly. That frustration, that disappointment, that anger is legitimate, but we are always going to make a decision based on the safety of the 20,000 people we are responsible for when the start horn blows.”

Star Tribune Ramsey County reporter Greta Kaul contributed to this story.



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Star Tribune

No prison for driver who fled after fatally hitting man who ran into W. Broadway

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A driver who hit and killed a man who ran into a busy Minneapolis street has been spared prison and was sentenced on the lesser of two charges.

Camoreay L. Prowell, 38, of St. Paul, was sentenced Thursday after pleading guilty in Hennepin County District Court to failing to stop for a traffic collision in connection with the death of Wilson G. Chinchilla, 26, of Minneapolis, on Oct. 19, 2022, on West Broadway near N. Logan Avenue.

Judge Hilary Caligiuri set aside a 13-month term and placed Prowell on probation for three years. He has about 3½ weeks left to serve in jail. As called for in the plea agreement, the more serious charge of criminal vehicular homicide was dismissed.

When asked about dropping the higher charge, the County Attorney’s Office said in a statement, “This office weighs the specific facts of each case to determine the appropriate resolution. In this instance, the charge for which Mr. Prowell was sentenced [Thursday] is correct and appropriate.”

The complaint said that Prowell was driving at the time after his license had been canceled. Court records in Minnesota revealed he’s been convicted three times for drunken driving and at least twice for driving after his license had been revoked.

According to the criminal complaint:

Police found Chinchilla’s body in the left lane of westbound West Broadway. Video surveillance showed that he ran out of a nearby home moments earlier toward the street.

Witnesses told police that a speeding SUV hit Chinchilla, slowed briefly as it continued west, then made a U-turn and returned to the scene of the crash. Prowell stopped, looked at the body and left.



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Star Tribune

Man charged with murder for killing wife, unborn child

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Mychel Stowers was released on parole from prison about seven months ago after he pleaded guilty to second-degree intentional murder in 2008 for fatally shooting a man in a drug deal gone wrong. According to charging documents, Stowers was living at a halfway house and granted a pass to visit his ex-wife at her North End apartment on the same day that she was killed.

Mychel Stowers’ description also matched the man witnesses saw fleeing Damara Stowers’ apartment moments after the shooting. One witness said they heard no fights or arguments before four gunshots rang. They heard another gunshot five seconds later, and another witness reported seeing a heavyset man with a white shirt and blue shorts run south afterwards.

The apartment’s owner said they were preparing to evict Damara Stowers, adding that her ex-boyfriend, a stocky man in his 30′s or 40′s, was living with her.

Police heard reports of a carjacking minutes later, finding a man shot in his leg on 99 Acker Street. Surveillance footage reviewed by authorities show someone approach that man and point something at him before a flash appeared. The man fell and the shooter ran away, but returned moments later to take the man’s vehicle and leave. That man was treated at Regions Hospital for a broken femur from a gunshot wound.

Authorities believe the gun used to carjack that man on Acker Street was the same used to kill Damara Stowers in her apartment.

There have been 25 homicides in St. Paul so far this year, according to a Minnesota Star Tribune database. There were 28 by this time last year.



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Minneapolis police overtime expected to hit $26 million in 2024

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The Minneapolis Police Department is on track to rack up $26 million in overtime this year — about $10 million over budget — as the number of extra hours officers work continues since a flood of officers left the force after George Floyd’s 2020 police killing and unrest that ensued.

Police Chief Brian O’Hara provided the OT figure to City Council members during a budget presentation Thursday in which he added that the department has about 210 vacancies.

“We’re using overtime every day to do the most basic functions of a police department,” he said. “It is critically low staffing right now.”

Last year, MPD paid nearly $23 million in overtime — about half of that “critical staffing overtime,” in which officers are paid double their hourly wage.

Overtime is being driven by a wave of resignations and retirements at the department, which had 578 sworn officers as of Thursday, down from nearly 900 in 2019, a 36% decrease that has left it with one of the nation’s lowest ratios of officers to residents.

MPD was averaging about $7 million in overtime prior to 2020, when it shot up to $11 million and has increased every year since, reaching $23 million last year.

Mayor Jacob Frey has proposed a $230 million budget for MPD next year, a 6% increase from 2024, or $13.7 million. Of that, $13 million is budgeted for “constitutional policing” to comply with a state human rights settlement. State and federal officials are forcing the police department into court-sanctioned monitoring for civil rights violations.

Most of that goes to personnel, which comprises 77% of the budget, according to MPD Finance Director Vicki Troswick. The mayor proposes 966 full-time total MPD employees next year, compared to 935 this year. Of those, 731 sworn officers are budgeted for 2025. The city charter requires the city to employ 1.7 officers per 1,000 residents, or 731 officers, although the city has struggling to reach that number amid a nationwide law enforcement staffing shortage.



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