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UAW strike expands to include Minnesota, Wisconsin facilities

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UAW President Shawn Fain called on workers to walk out of 38 General Motors and Stellantis plants across 20 states on Friday afternoon.

MINNEAPOLIS — An expanded strike by the United Auto Workers union is now set to impact plants in Minnesota and Wisconsin.

On Friday, UAW President Shawn Fain called on workers to walk out of 38 General Motors and Stellantis plants in 20 states at noon eastern Friday after the union and carmakers failed to make significant progress in their ongoing contract negotiations. The UAW’s contract expired at midnight on Sept. 14, and workers walked out of a Ford assembly plant near Detroit, a GM factory in Missouri, and a Jeep plant run by Stellantis in Ohio.

The latest strike update primarily impacts GM and Stellantis, who Fain said have rejected all of the union’s job security proposals, profit-sharing proposals and proposals to convert temps.

Locations in Minnesota and Wisconsin included in the strike are:

  • GM: Hudson Parts Distribution in Hudson, Wisconsin
  • Stellantis: Plymouth, Minnesota
  • Stellantis: Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Fain said Ford was spared additional strikes because the company has met some of the union’s demands during negotiations over the past week.

Plants that are already in strike will remain on strike. According to the Associated Press, up until Friday, the initial strike involved about 13,000 of the union’s 146,000 members.

Other Stellantis locations included in Friday’s strike expansion are located in Marysville, Center Line, Warren, Auburn Hills, Romulus and Streetsboro, Michigan; Commerce City, Colorado; Naperville, Illinois; Ontario, California; Beaverton, Oregon; Morrow, Georgia; Winchester, Virginia; Carrollton, Texas; Tappan, New York; and Mansfield, Massachusetts.

GM plants called to strike are in Pontiac, Belleville, Ypsilanti, Burton, Swartz Creek and Lansing, Michigan; West Chester, Ohio; Aurora, Colorado; Bolingbrook, Illinois; Reno, Nevada; Rancho Cucamonga, California; Roanoke, Texas; Martinsburg, West Virginia; Brandon, Mississippi; Charlotte, North Carolina; Memphis, Tennessee; and Lang Horne, Pennsylvania.

“As promised, we’re expecting to stand up strike in response to the lack of response in bargaining with General Motors and Stellatnis,” Fain said Friday. “We will shut down parts distribution until those two companies come to their sense and come to the table with a serious offer.”

The UAW union is seeking big raises and better benefits from General Motors, Ford and Stellantis, and want to get back concessions that the workers made years ago, when the companies were in financial trouble.

According to the Associated Press, the union is asking for 36% raises in general pay over four years — a top-scale assembly plant worker gets about $32 an hour now. The union also demanded an end to varying tiers of wages for factory jobs; a 32-hour week with 40 hours of pay; the restoration of traditional defined-benefit pensions for new hires who now receive only 401(k)-style retirement plans; and a return of cost-of-living pay raises, among other benefits.

This is a developing story. KARE 11 will provide more details as new information becomes available.

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries

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Project ‘Will You See Me?’ aims to build empathy through stories

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Reverend Shawn Morrison, founder and executive director of Good in the ‘Hood, shares his project to connect humanity through stories.

MINNEAPOLIS — In the busy intersections of life, some moments are often overlooked, while others are ignored. 

Reverend Shawn Morrison, founder and executive director of Good in the ‘Hood, sees these intersections as opportunities for connecting and understanding.

“Three years ago, I just got a heart for this,” Morrison said, explaining that overlooking these moments was never an option. “Some might say it’s a calling that I was just compelled,” he shared, describing his deep motivation.

This project, “Will You See Me?” shares stories of people who are often unseen, aiming to create connections and build empathy. With each story, photograph and encounter, the team hopes to bring dignity and significance to every life they touch. 

Ultimately, they plan to compile these stories and images into a book to serve as a powerful testament to the human experience.

“How can we not make it just an excursion but an encounter? How can we give dignity and significance a listening ear of understanding?” Morrison asked, hoping the project fosters empathy through shared narratives.

One participant, Wade Smith, reflected on the range of life experiences among the project’s subjects. 

“I went to radio and television broadcasting school, yeah, and then I went to the service,” Smith shared. 

Morrison’s approach includes photographing and recording participants’ words, preserving their voices authentically.

After initial challenges finding collaborators, Shawn Nielsen, owner of Nielsen Studios, and Elizabeth Korth, owner of Narrative Nuance, joined Morrison in his mission. Together, they approach individuals directly, offering respect, gift cards and a chance to be truly seen. 

“People don’t even look at me,” Smith said. “It’s a problem for all Americans.”

Through each encounter, Morrison hopes to leave lasting impressions. 

“I’m hoping that the people of our community start to see things differently, and they might ask this question, ‘What can I do?’” Morrison said.

Dre Woods, another participant, spoke about his family and dreams. Woods asked for help to take care of his four-legged companion, Oreo. 

“I’m trying to feed her, right? That’s my baby,” Woods shared, revealing the motivations that guide him.

Dozens of stories and plenty of surprises, all things that give an often unshared perspective.

“I be asking God what it is why I’m still here. A lot of my friends not hear no more and I think about that,” Woods said. 

Each interaction serves as a reminder of humanity’s shared connections. 

“I think that it would encourage someone to do just something once. Each person could do something one day at a time, to be profound,” Nielsen said.

For Morrison, these stories are part of a larger mission. 

“Boy, has there been a rest of the story for some of these beautiful people,” he said, hoping to inspire others to view their communities with fresh eyes.

Each moment and interaction serves as a call to action: look closer; adjust the community’s vision; and see the intersection they pass by more clearly — as part of their own destination.



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‘Don’t Move’ to screen at Twin Cities Film Fest

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Head to the Marcus West End Cinema to see some of this year’s up-and-coming movies.

ST. LOUIS PARK, Minn. — Editor’s Note: This video originally aired on Oct. 12, 2024. 

Just in time for Halloween, the Twin Cities Film Fest has arrived and it features a movie perfect for spooky season. 

“Don’t Move” will screen as part of the festival at 5:45 p.m. on Friday. Home grown directors Brian Netto and Adam Schindler visited KARE 11 News at Noon to share more about the showing. 

The film is a thriller about a woman who is injected with a paralytic agent in a forest. She must fight for her life as her body slowly shuts down, according to a Twin Cities Film Fest release. 

Netto and Schindler met at Woodbury Elementary School and have remained friends to this day. This will be their third film shown at the fest. 

Tickets are $13 and you can learn more about this movie at this link. All film festival movies will be screened at the Marcus West End Cinema in St. Louis Park . 



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Ruff Start Rescue helps animals abandoned after hurricanes

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PRINCETON, Minn. — As many families fell on hard times due to hurricanes Helene and Milton, their pets have suffered too. 

Ruff Start Rescue, headquartered in Princeton, Minn., rescued 24 animals from areas in Tennessee and North Carolina that were hit by hurricanes. Azure Davis, the founder and executive director, visited the KARE 11 studio to share more about these animals and how you can help. 

For more information on Ruff Start Rescue and to look at adoptable animals, click here. 



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