Star Tribune
Bloomington voters will decide whether to keep ranked-choice voting
“Whatever the voters choose is what the city is going to report and implement,” said Bloomington City Clerk Jamy Hanson, whose office oversees elections.
The suburb of about 90,000 people adopted ranked-choice voting in 2020. It’s one of a number of cities that have opted to change the way residents vote, including Minneapolis, St. Paul, St. Louis Park and Minnetonka.
But the method remains controversial. The Minnesota House earlier this year rejected a bill that would have allowed more cities to use ranked-choice voting. Minnetonka voters last year voted by a wide margin to continue using the system.
Under ranked-choice voting, any candidate who receives more than half of the votes in the first round is declared the winner. If no candidate reaches that threshold, the person with the lowest number of votes is eliminated; elections workers then look at the ballots of people who had ranked that person first and instead add their second-choice candidates to the tally. The process continues until a candidate reaches the threshold needed to win.
Both supporters and opponents acknowledge it’s difficult to pinpoint whether ranked-choice voting changed the outcome of Bloomington races, in part because there’s not a definitive way to know who would have won the primary and competed in the general election under the old system. Of the 10 most recent Bloomington races, six were decided in the first round and four were tabulated using ranked-choice voting methods.
Opponents argue ranked-choice voting was rushed through when voters were distracted by other pressing issues like the COVID-19 pandemic. They say the system is confusing, contributes to voter fatigue, and undermines people’s already fragile faith in the election system. Now, they say, is the time to reevaluate.
Star Tribune
Lilacs around Minnesota are blooming once more due to strange, stressful weather
One of Minnesota’s favorite spring flowers are blooming again in late summer, a sign of stress from the extreme swings in Minnesota’s weather over the past several years.
Many lilacs across the Twin Cities have sprouted out their purple and pink flowers for a second time this year during an unseasonably warm September. The re-blooming is unusual for lilacs and can be unsettling to see, said Julie Weisenhorn, a professor and the horticulture educator at the University of Minnesota Extension.
“It’s not something we’d call ‘normal’ but it’s something we’ve been seeing now over the past few years,” Weisenhorn said.
When trees and plants suffer from blights or pests, or are stressed by droughts, floods or other phenomena, they sometimes produce an overabundance of seed. It’s a way that they’ve evolved to ensure that, if they do succumb, their progeny has a chance to live, Weisenhorn said.
So during droughts, oak trees may produce a super-crop of acorns. And lilacs will sometimes produce a second bloom in the fall.
Minnesota is not experiencing a drought right now. The summer of 2024, warm September aside, has actually been the most typical weather season the state has experienced in years.
“Sometimes it takes a a little while for plants to react,” Weisenhorn said. “So you have to think back to last year and even the year before last, and realize how stressed these plants were doing those extreme dry summers, and then going through a strange winter with no snow and very little cold.”
That drought was followed by one of the wettest three-month stretches ever recorded in Minnesota from April to June, she said.
Star Tribune
Edina man dies, woman injured in North Shore crash
DULUTH — An Edina man died following a single-car crash along the North Shore of Lake Superior on Tuesday night, according to a news release from Cook County.
Douglas Paul Junker was dead at the scene of the accident on Hwy. 61 and Joanne Marie Bergstadt, also of Edina, was transported to a hospital in Duluth. Her condition is not known. According to WTIP, the car went off the road and crashed through a fence alongside a bike path and into a wooded area.
The Cook County Sheriff’s Department and Minnesota State Patrol are investigating the accident.
Star Tribune
Inmate at Moose Lake prison found dead in cell
The death of a 39-year-old inmate at the prison in Moose Lake, found by his cellmate, is under investigation, according to a news release from the Minnesota Department of Corrections.
The man, who has not yet been named, was found unresponsive midmorning Tuesday in his room. Staff attempted life-saving measures, but were unable to save him. His name has been withheld while family is notified.
The Minnesota Department of Corrections Office of Special Investigations, along with the Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office, is looking into the death.
Moose Lake’s correctional facility is a medium-security prison in northern Minnesota that can house up to 1,000 inmates.