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Fire leaves multiple people homeless in Eveleth
EVELETH, Minn. — Authorities say 8 people are without a home after a fire raged through a historic apartment building in northern Minnesota.
According to the Eveleth Fire Department, crews were sent to the 300 block of Grant Avenue just after 5:30 a.m. Sunday. Multiple nearby fire departments reported to the scene and used nearly two million gallons of water over the course of 12 hours trying to extinguish the blaze.
A decision was made to demolish the old building to keep flames from spreading to nearby structures.
Eveleth is located about an hour north and west of Duluth.
KARE 11 will update this story as more details are made available.
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Stone Arch Bridge downtown side to close next week
Repairs on the bridge began in April, with crews repairing and replacing stone, replacing the mortar, and making other fixes to the historic structure.
MINNEAPOLIS — Starting next week the downtown side of the Stone Arch Bridge will be closed as repairs continue on the popular walking path.
Work began in April, with crews repairing and replacing stone, replacing the mortar on the entire bridge, and making other repairs as needed. According to the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT), this work will slow deterioration and improve the conditions of the bridge.
While the bridge is being worked on, people can still walk and bike halfway across. The first side to close was the St. Anthony Main side, which will be reopening after the downtown side closes on Dec. 2.
The Stone Arch Bridge was built in the 1880s by James J. Hill’s Great Northern Railroad. At its peak, it brought 80 passenger trains a day to Union Station, according to the Minneapolis Parks Board. Ownership of the bridge was transferred to Hennepin County in the 1990s and it was converted to a pedestrian and bicycle path.
The downtown side will be closed through the fall of 2025, and MnDOT anticipates work being done and the bridge reopening by the spring of 2026.
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What’s open, closed this Thanksgiving in the Twin Cities?
MINNEAPOLIS — Thanksgiving is nearly here again, and it’s a holiday you need to plan ahead for as many grocery stores are closed. But Twin Cities residents aren’t completely without options this Thursday.
Most Cub Foods locations are open until 4 p.m. on Nov. 28. All Cub pharmacies, wine & spirits, and liquor stores will be closed all day. Stores will reopen with regular hours on Friday, November 29th. Please check your store’s hours on cub.com.
Twin Cities locations are open until 1 p.m.
Stores are open until 2 p.m.
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Tim Walz accepts turkey presentation, eases back into duties
The ceremony in the governor’s reception room was the first time Walz had met with reporters at the state Capitol since VP Kamala Harris made him her running mate.
ST PAUL, Minn. — As feathers flew, Tim Walz accepted the symbolic presentation of a turkey Tuesday as he eases back into his duties as Minnesota’s governor following the Harris-Walz ticket’s defeat in the presidential election.
Unlike the Minnesota-grown turkeys that President Joe Biden pardoned at the White House on Monday, Walz didn’t pardon this turkey, he said, “because in Minnesota we know turkeys are delicious.”
The 41.8-pounder (19 kilograms) named Tom was raised by Paisley VonBerge, a Future Farmers of America leader from Hutchinson, and it will star in her family’s Thanksgiving dinner. It flapped its wings and shed feathers as she hoisted it onto a display table but quickly calmed down, oblivious to its fate.
“After today, this bird will go back to my farm to be enjoyed the way that turkeys are intended,” Paisley said.
“That is very Minnesotan,” Walz added to loud laughter. “We don’t hide the fact we love our turkeys.”
Minnesota produces more turkeys annually than any other state. Its farmers raised 38.5 million birds in 2023, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture statistics, followed by North Carolina at 29 million. North Carolina edged Minnesota last year in total poundage, producing just over 1.07 billion pounds (485 million kilograms), compared with just over 1.05 billion pounds (467 million kilograms) for Minnesota.
The ceremony in the governor’s reception room was the first time Walz had met with reporters at the state Capitol since last summer, before Vice President Kamala Harris picked him as her running mate.
While Walz has held private meetings in recent weeks with staff, legislative leaders and other public officials, interviewed potential judicial appointees, and fielded some press questions, he’s still ramping back up with public events. He said Tuesday that he had no regrets about agreeing to run — and is proud he did.
The Walz-Harris ticket got over 74 million votes to nearly 77 million for President-elect Donald Trump. While Walz said that shows that many Americans liked the message he and Harris put out, he acknowledged it was “not quite enough.”
“I was just glad to be out there, and to be honest, glad to tell Minnesota’s story — that we get things done together and we’re pretty hopeful people,” he told reporters.
Walz is already preparing for the upcoming legislative session, when he and his fellow Democrats will have to share power with Republicans — a contrast with the last two years when they enjoyed the “trifecta” of controlling the governor’s office and both the state House and Senate.
While Democrats kept their one-vote majority in the Senate, recounts that wrapped up Monday confirmed that the House will be tied 67-67 when lawmakers convene Jan. 14, barring successful court challenges that could be filed in a few races.
That’s going to force compromises if lawmakers are going to pass a balanced budget before the session ends in May. But Walz said they proved power sharing could work in 2019, when Republicans controlled the Senate and Minnesota was one of the few states with a divided Legislature.
“We’re going to have some opportunities to continue to move in the positive direction we’ve gone,” Walz said.
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