Milwaukee, WI
What Milwaukeeans need to know about the RNC, including road closures, parking, venues and more
How people feel about the 2024 RNC coming to Milwaukee in July
Reporter Tamia Fowlkes talks to people about the 2024 Republican National Convention coming to Milwaukee and gets their thoughts on the candidates.
Milwaukee has been preparing to host the 2024 Republican National Convention for two years.
From Milwaukee’s selection as the RNC host city to organizers’ final preparations for the convention, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel journalists have been reporting on various aspects of the RNC. The convention, which will take place in downtown Milwaukee next week, is expected to bring about 50,000 visitors to the city.
Below is a guide to the convention and its widespread impacts on our city, featuring coverage from our reporters. Click on the in-line links in each section to learn more about a topic.
What road closures and parking restrictions will be in place during the RNC?
Though the convention runs from July 15 to 18, you should expect driving and parking restrictions in the days before and after the RNC as well. Numerous downtown Milwaukee roads will be closed due to the convention between July 11 and 19. Widespread street parking restrictions will also be in effect between July 5 and 21.
From Sunday morning to Monday morning, the Hoan Bridge, which connects Interstate 794 between Van Buren Street and Carferry Drive, will be closed to traffic. And the following roadways will be closed throughout the week of July 14:
- McKinley Avenue / Fond du Lac Avenue ramps for Wisconsin Highway 145
- I-794 eastbound ramp at James Lovell Street
- Kilbourn Avenue Tunnels
How will the RNC affect public transportation?
Multiple Milwaukee County Transit System bus routes will be disrupted or follow detours between July 11 and 19, including the East-West Bus Rapid Transit CONNECT 1. There will also be disruptions to the County’s paratransit service, Transit Plus, for riders with disabilities.
Bublr Bikes, Milwaukee’s bikeshare system, will shut down seven of its stations between July 11 and 19. The stations are all located downtown in and around the security perimeter.
Milwaukee’s Hop streetcar will run on a normal schedule from 5 a.m. to midnight and arrive every 15 minutes.
Where can’t I go downtown during the RNC?
A two-tiered security perimeter will surround the main convention venues. An extensive list of items are banned from the security zone and surrounding demonstration areas.
The vehicle security perimeter stretches roughly from West Cherry Street on the north to Clybourn Street on the south and from North 9th Street on the west to the east side of the Milwaukee River. Residences and businesses inside the vehicle security perimeter will be accessible to the public, and pedestrians and cyclists will be able to freely enter the vehicle security perimeter from any area. Vehicles, including rideshare and food delivery drivers, must enter through one of the vehicle screening points. Restrictions will begin at 2 a.m. on July 15.
The pedestrian restricted perimeter stretches from West McKinley Avenue on the north to just past West Wisconsin Avenue to the south. The area encompasses Pere Marquette Park on the east side and stretches past North James Lovell Street on the west. The pedestrian restricted perimeter will be accessible only to credentialed or ticketed individuals, such as convention attendees or volunteers.
The boundaries of the security perimeter include a portion of the Milwaukee River. From July 14 to 19, no commercial or recreational boats will be allowed on the Milwaukee River from Cherry Street to Michigan Street, and road bridges in this area will remain down during the convention. Multiple boat rental companies will halt operations during the conventions.
When and where are protests during the RNC?
There are two designated protest zones for the convention: one on the north side near Fiserv Forum and another on the south side near Baird Center.
Both areas will have a speaker’s platform. On the north side, the platform will be at Haymarket Square at West McKinley Avenue and North King Drive, and on the south side, the platform will be at Zeidler Union Square.
The protest zones are both outside the hard security zone for the convention, which prompted pushback from activists who were planning to march closer to Fiserv Forum. After a month-long legal battle over the designated protest zones, the activist group preparing to march on the RNC announced a route that complies with the U.S. Secret Service’s security perimeter.
The group plans to gather in Red Arrow Park at 10 a.m. on July 15, the first day of the convention. There will be a rally at 11 a.m., followed by the march at 12 p.m., according to organizers.
Check out the map below for a newly announced march route, as well as our guide to protest rights for the RNC. For more insight into how the city plans to police the convention and protests, check out our breakdown of Milwaukee police’s “rules of engagement” for tear gas, pepper spray and other policing strategies.
Which restaurants and bars will be open during the RNC?
If you’re inside the convention, make sure to check out Convention Fest at the Baird Center, which will showcase 100 local vendors each afternoon of the RNC. Featured businesses include Immy’s African Cuisine, Slo’ Motion BBQ, Scrima’s Pizza from Waukesha and Ainnie’s Sweets, among many others.
If you’re hoping to stay out late during convention week, here’s our rundown of bars and restaurants taking advantage of the state’s new law allowing Milwaukee-area businesses to stay open until 4 a.m. on RNC nights.
For visitors, check out this guide for an overview of the best restaurants and bars across the city.
What is the RNC schedule?
The RNC recently released its official Master Event Calendar for delegates and guests. Events run Sunday through Thursday and include an invite-only welcome party at the Henry Maier Festival Park, official convention sessions, affinity group receptions, lectures, film screenings and late-night parties.
RNC events will take place at various Milwaukee landmarks, including the Bradley Symphony Center, Harley-Davidson Museum, Pfister Hotel, Mitchell Park Domes and Lakefront Brewery.
How to watch the RNC
The convention venues are closed to all but delegates, politicians, media members and volunteers. However, there are plenty of ways to watch the RNC. Numerous platforms will stream the convention, including the Journal Sentinel. FOX News Media will also have coverage across all of its platforms.
What is the RNC?
The Republican National Convention is a multiday event at which delegates will officially select the party’s nominees for president and vice president. Former President Donald Trump is the party’s presumptive nominee. He is expected to accept the presidential nomination, and name a vice president, during the convention at Fiserv Forum.
Things to do in Milwaukee during the RNC
From extended museum hours to local farmers markets and festivals, there are many non-convention things to do in Milwaukee during RNC week. Check out our list of Milwaukee’s “postcard-worthy views” or try to find some of the 100 objects that make Milwaukee.
More: Have questions about how the RNC will affect you? A new city website answers them.
More: Here’s a look at the political billboards popping up around Milwaukee ahead of the RNC
Milwaukee, WI
Downtown Milwaukee temporary steam outage, We Energies restoring service
MILWAUKEE – An issue at the Valley Power Plant caused a temporary steam outage for downtown Milwaukee buildings on Saturday, Dec. 13.
Steam service interrupted
What we know:
According to We Energies, the gas supply to the Valley Power Plant was interrupted on Saturday morning, causing it to go offline. The plant produces steam for downtown buildings for heating.
We Energies says it has restored service to the steam system and is bringing steam back to customers, but the restoration process requires steam pressure to build back up in the steam system. Once pressure reaches safe levels, steam service can be delivered to customers.
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Customers should begin to see service return over the next few hours, and some are already restored.
We Energies says it does not anticipate any more steam outages, and that this issue is not affecting electric or natural gas service.
Show canceled
What we know:
The Marcus Performing Arts Center says its building has been impacted by the steam outage and, as a result, had to cancel its 1 p.m. matinée performance of The Pigeon Gets A Big Time Holiday Extravaganza!
Ticket holders will be contacted directly to get further information about next steps.
All other shows at the Marcus Performing Arts Center will go on as scheduled.
The Source: We Energies and The Marcus Performing Arts Center sent FOX6 the information.
Milwaukee, WI
Admirals lose to IceHogs, comeback bid falls short in Rockford
ROCKFORD, Ill. – Goalie Laurent Brossoit stopped 33 shots – and scored a goal – to lead the Rockford IceHogs to a 5-3 win over the Milwaukee Admirals on Friday.
The loss extended the Admirals losing streak to four games.
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By the numbers:
With goalie Matt Murray pulled, the Admirals dumped the puck into the IceHogs zone from the red line. Brossoit tracked it down behind his goal and sailed a shot into the empty Milwaukee cage at 18:56 of the final frame.
The teams waited until the second period to start scoring goals. IceHogs forward Nick Lardis started the scoring with a shorthanded goal at 1:18 of the second frame. He sent a wrist shot from the slot into the net just as Milwaukee had two players leave the penalty box.
Just 0:33 later, Rockford’s Brett Seney exited the penalty box and grabbed a loose puck at the Admirals blue line. He moved to the right circle and sent a shot over the glove of Admirals goalie Matt Murray at 1:51.
Milwaukee got on the board with a power-play goal at 4:56 of the second frame. Oasiz Wiesblatt skated with the puck from the left point to the right circle and slid a pass to the crease. Daniel Carr redirected the puck past IceHogs goalie Brossoit for his team-leading tenth goal of the season, and seventh on the power play. Wiesblatt and Joakim Kemell assisted.
Rockford scored two more before the close of the second period. Martin Misiak scored his first pro goal at 15:39 and Jamie Engelbert added a 4-on-4 goal at 18:45 to give the IceHogs a 4-1 lead after two frames.
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The Admirals cut the deficit to 4-2 when Jake Lucchini scored his sixth goal of the season at 11:21 of the third period. Lucchini slammed a rebound of a Jordan Oesterle shot into the net. Cole O’Hara and Oesterle were awarded assists.
The Ads got within one just :36 later when O’Hara shot a blocked puck into the net from the right circle. Oesterle and Ryan Ufko assisted on the goal at 11:57 of the third period.
Milwaukee returns to UW-Milwaukee Panther Arena to host the Chicago Wolves on Saturday, Dec. 13.
The Source: The Milwaukee Admirals provided this report.
Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee parents sue MPS saying staff member locked students in ‘dungeon’ as punishment
Children at Thurston Woods School in Milwaukee were locked in a boiler room as a punishment, a group of parents say in a recently filed lawsuit.
The lawsuit was filed Dec. 8 in the Milwaukee County Circuit Court’s civil division by three sets of parents. The Milwaukee Board of School Directors is among the defendants.
The parents claim in court papers several employees at the K4-8 elementary school on North 35th Street sent kids to the boiler room if they misbehaved.
Some of those staff members, as well as students, referred to the boiler room as “The Dungeon,” according to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit claims a former male paraprofessional at the school locked three students in a boiler room multiple times during the 2022-’23 and 2023-’24 school years.
In the lawsuit, the parents said the “dungeon” presented a serious hazard to the children because of the potential exposure to “chemicals, cleaning agents, boilers, and other machinery.”
The paraprofessional resigned in November 2023 after he was investigated for violating several school district policies. At the time, he told district officials he placed the students in the room as a scare tactic, the lawsuit states.
Among the defendants is former assistant principal Dennis Daniels.
He pleaded guilty in January to a misdemeanor charge of attempted misconduct in public office after failing to alert police that an 11-year-old student brought a gun to school in February 2024.
He initially was charged with a felony, but brokered a deal with prosecutors to instead plead to an amended lesser charge.
“Milwaukee Public Schools is committed to maintaining safe and welcoming learning environments for all students and staff,” Stephen Davis, an MPS spokesman, said in a statement to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “While we cannot comment on ongoing litigation, the district thoroughly investigated this matter in 2023 and took appropriate disciplinary action which included termination of employment.”
In a statement, Milwaukee attorney Drew DeVinney, who represents the parents, described the alleged behavior of school staff as “disbursing and egregious,” and that it appeared no one intervened to stop it.
He urged other families to come forward if they also were impacted.
“Concerningly, MPS did not report any of these instances of seclusion and restraint to the Department of Public Instruction, in violation of Wisconsin law.
“We hope that this lawsuit will serve as a vehicle to prevent further incidents and abuse, and to obtain justice for our clients.”
Chris Ramirez covers courts for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. He can be reached at caramirez@gannett.com.
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