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Walz visits St. Cloud on statewide tour highlighting infrastructure needs

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ST. CLOUD – Tucked among fields on the South Side of St. Cloud is an innovative facility creating jobs, renewable energy and farm products. But it isn’t a private business; it’s the city’s wastewater treatment plant — and the state’s only municipal facility turning waste into fuel and fertilizer.

Gov. Tim Walz visited the facility Tuesday as part of a statewide tour highlighting infrastructure needs ahead of the 2024 legislative session.

“Not a lot of people want to talk about wastewater, but we all deal with it. It’s critically important,” Walz said after learning about the facility’s groundbreaking programs. Not only does the plant produce enough energy to power the facility and sell energy back to the grid, it is also poised to be the first wastewater facility in the world to produce green hydrogen fuel on-site.

“It’s an exciting, exciting way to do business,” Walz said. “In the long run, we’re going to save money out here, we’re going to clean the environment [and] we’re going to make services better for the people of St. Cloud.”

In the past 25 years, the city has made more than $150 million worth of upgrades to its water and wastewater facilities using federal funding distributed to the city by way of low-interest loans, which saved taxpayers about $18 million during that time, according to Tracy Hodel, public services director for St. Cloud.

The loans go through the state’s Public Facilities Authority and are typically approved as part of the Legislature’s bonding bill. Last year, the organization funded about $300 million in projects across the state, according to its director, Jeff Freeman.

The loans are another way for cities to fund water and wastewater projects, which Walz acknowledged are often difficult for small communities to pay for. Several cities, including Brainerd, Cold Spring and Duluth, are requesting the Legislature fund projects related to water mains, storm sewers and wastewater facilities in next year’s bonding bill.

Yet lawmakers face a difficult task next year picking which projects get funding. State officials received $7.2 billion in project proposals through June of this year, far more than lawmakers could bond for, according to Minnesota statute.

“There’s a lot of need out there in the whole state,” Senate Capital Investment Committee Chair Sandy Pappas said last week during a tour of projects in the Rochester area.

Pappas, DFL-St. Paul, said she expects a smaller bonding bill in 2024 after the Legislature passed a $2.6 billion package in May, the largest infrastructure bill in state history.

Last year’s bill came after years of gridlock between lawmakers; no bonding package had been passed since 2020. Under state law, bonding bills require a two-thirds vote of the Minnesota House and Senate to pass, which has become increasingly difficult to reach over the past decade.

Pappas estimates $1.5 billion to $1.6 billion will be spent on public works next spring.

Walz said Tuesday he will announce his bonding proposal in January.

Star Tribune staff writer Trey Mewes contributed to this story.



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Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, on the campaign trial, gives a pep talk to the Mankato West High School Scarlets, a team he once coached.

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MANKATO – The football players in their pads jogged out to face their rivals Friday night as Gov. Tim Walz, back home briefly as he campaigns across the country as vice presidential nominee, cheered them on.

“Don’t forget to have fun, enjoy,” Walz told players on the football team at Mankato West High School, where he worked as a geography teacher and assistant football coach before launching a political career that carried him to the Democratic Party’s national ticket.

Since choosing Walz as her running mate, Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris has touted his background as a football coach, hunter and gun owner, as Democrats reach out to Midwestern voters and look for inroads with men.

Walz’s stop in Mankato is one of a series of media stops in the battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, where the governor is talking high school football and hunting.

“This is the best of America,” Walz told reporters after greeting the players of Mankato West ahead of their rivalry game with Mankato East. He said he would visit his old classroom, before heading to watch the game.

A quarter center ago, Walz was the assistant defensive football coach for the 1999 Mankato West football team that won the state championship. That year’s crosstown rivalry game was a spark for Mankato West as it headed toward its state championship, said John Considine, a Mankato West alum and right tackle on that 1999 Class 4A championship team.

“It’s good to have him back,” Considine said Friday.

Local Republicans called Walz’s appearance a stunt. “They’re getting desperate to get the word out,” said Yvonne Simon, chair of the Blue Earth County GOP, adding she’s doesn’t think the governor’s “coach” branding is catching on.



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Longtime owner of Gunflint Lodge dies at 85

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“There’s a fair amount of stuff we’ve digested over the years,” Kerfoot told the Star Tribune at the time of the sale. “It’ll take a while to pick all of it out of me.”

In recent years, he and Sue have spent summers in Minnesota and then traveled back to Missouri to be close to family for the rest of the year.

Visitors love to drop in and talk about Justine Kerfoot or Bruce Kerfoot or the years they spent working at the lodge, Fredrikson said. He’s found that Bruce’s energy seemingly matched that of his mother, who died in 2001 when she was 94.

“He was one of those people that was able to get stuff done more easily or better than other people,” Fredrikson said. “Maybe because of who he was, or maybe because the stars align for this kind of person.”

In a social media post, Kerfoot’s family said they had peace knowing he and his mother “were paddling together to their shore lunch spot.”

Mark Hennessy knew Kerfoot for 40 years, but has had a closer view for the past three years. He said without Kerfoot, the Chik-Wauk Museum and Nature Center, located near the end of the Gunflint Trail, wouldn’t exist. Whenever there was a work project, the executive director said, Kerfoot would show up.



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Motorcyclist, 17, killed in collision with SUV in Burnsville

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A teenage motorcyclist was killed in a collision with an SUV at a Burnsville intersection, officials said Friday.

The crash occurred shortly after 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Burnsville Parkway and Interstate 35W, police said.

The motorcyclist was identified by the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office as Peter Vsevolod Genis, 17, of Burnsville.

An SUV driver was turning left from westbound Burnsville Parkway to northbound 35W when Genis went through a red light while heading east and struck the SUV.

The SUV driver and a woman with him, both from Burnsville, were not hurt.

The other vehicle was a Mercedes SUV. The driver was a 30-year-old male from Burnsville, with a 29-year-old female passenger from Burnsville. Neither of them was injured.



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