Wisconsin
Southeast Wisconsin weather: Sunny and mild temperatures
Expect sunshine and upper 60s to low 70s again today. With winds out of the southeast, it will be the classic cooler by the lake and warmer inland afternoon. We’ll see mostly clear skies tonight. Looking to the north, there will be the chance to see the Northern Lights across Wisconsin.
We’ll see one summer-like day on Friday with highs in the upper 70s and low 80s. Winds will become a bit breezy out of the southwest. A wave of energy passes across the state this weekend. While the best rain chances will be across central and northern Wisconsin, our area will still see a chance. A few showers will be possible Saturday night into Sunday.
Cool and breezy air will move in Sunday into Monday with highs falling into the mid-50s by Monday. Overnight lows will fall into the 30s with the chance for frost if winds calm down during the overnight hours.
THURSDAY: Sunny and MildHigh: 68 lake, 73 Inland
Wind: SE 5-10 mph
TONIGHT: Mainly Clear (Ch. Northern Lights)
Low: 53
Wind: SSW 5-10 mph
FRIDAY: Partly Cloudy, Breezy, and Warm
High: 80
SATURDAY: Partly Cloudy, Rain Chance At Night
High: 62
SUNDAY: Ch. Showers, Cool, Breezy
High: 58
MONDAY: Ch. Showers, Cool, Breezy
High: 55
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Wisconsin
Wisconsin Democrats announce marijuana legalization bill
In a bid to capitalize on recent bipartisan pushes to regulate the state’s hemp industry, Wisconsin Democrats have introduced a bill to fully legalize marijuana.
But the effort to create legal recreational and medical programs is all but sure to fail. Republicans, who control both chambers of the Legislature, have not taken up previous Democratic attempts at legalization and have nixed repeated attempts by Gov. Tony Evers to include legalization in his state budgets. GOP leadership has said it will only consider limited medical programs.
Still, Democrats who introduced their latest proposal Monday said that, in the face of a changing federal approach to hemp regulation, full legalization would be both an economic boon for the state, and a way to limit incarceration.
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“Arresting someone for smoking weed does not make our neighborhoods safer,” said Rep. Darrin Madison, D-Milwaukee. “It limits access to jobs, housing, education and stability for life and … those arrests fall overwhelmingly on Black and brown communities.”
The proposal would create a licensing system for growers, processors and retailers, and regulate the testing and distribution of marijuana products.
And it would create a process for reviewing the sentences of people locked up on drug charges, with a path to vacating current convictions, or expunging a person’s record of past convictions.
At a press conference announcing the legislation, Mike Sickler, who owns a Menomonee Falls-based cannabis retailer TerraSol, said that legalization would let businesses like his continue under a clear legal framework.
“We already have the infrastructure. We already have the best practices in place. We already have the workforce. We already have the market. What does not exist is a clear state law that allows us to continue operating responsibly,” Sickler said. “Legal cannabis … allows businesses like mine to transition into a regulated system instead of shutting down or leaving the state. It protects jobs, it supports farmers, it keeps revenue here, instead of it going to Illinois and to Michigan.”
According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 40 states have legal medicinal marijuana programs, and 24 allow some form of recreational use. Wisconsin advocates point to public polling in the state that shows that most voters support legalizing cannabis, including just under half of Republicans and a large majority of Democrats and independents.
But Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, has said he won’t back recreational marijuana, and GOP leaders across the Assembly and Senate have struggled to create a unified plan for establishing a medical program.
Instead, recent GOP efforts have been focused on regulating the existing hemp industry. Those businesses flourished in the wake of a federal loophole created by the 2018 Farm Bill, which was unexpectedly closed late last year as part of the deal to end the 2025 government shutdown. That move sent Wisconsin hemp farmers and producers of low-dose THC products derived from hemp scrambling to understand the new landscape.
Bipartisan bills have since been introduced to adapt Wisconsin’s legal hemp framework. One would introduce a three-tier regulatory system similar to how alcohol is regulated. Another would essentially add guardrails to the status quo, adding safety standards to the existing market of vapes, gummies, edibles and beverages that have proliferated across Wisconsin.
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Wisconsin
Sauna culture is expanding in Wisconsin. Here are locations to try.
Saunas aren’t new to Wisconsin, especially the northern parts of the state where Finnish immigrants first brought the tradition generations ago.
Nowadays, Wisconsin saunas are no longer just enjoyed Up North, at the gym, and in spas.
Sauna fanatics and newbies around the state are spending time in community saunas at local parks, on Great Lakes shorelines and by rivers, in parking lots and neighbors’ backyards.
The growing number of public sauna businesses is proof Wisconsin has hopped on the bus that neighboring Minnesota, known as the nation’s unofficial sauna capital, has been driving for years.
Here’s a list in alphabetical order of where to find sauna businesses around the state.
Heat Haven Sauna Park – Wauwatosa
Located in Wauwatosa’s Hart Park, Heat Haven Sauna Park offers daily, 75-minute sessions in barrel saunas. Select sessions are accompanied by fitness classes taught by local instructors. The sauna park plans events throughout the season and private sauna sessions are also available.
Heat Haven is open daily Nov. 21, 2025 through April 12, 2026.
Where: 7300 W. Chestnut Street, Wauwatosa, WI
Cost: $31.77 gets visitors a 75-minute public session in barrel saunas. Prices vary for sauna events accompanied by fitness classes.
For more information: https://heathaven.co/
Heat Retreat – Eau Claire
Heat Retreat offers sauna rentals nearby Eau Claure as well as community sauna sessions in their wood-fired saunas.
Where: Currently offers community sauna sessions at River Prairie Park, Altoona, WI near 44 North and the Helix. Saunas available for rental.
Cost: An hour-long community session costs $23. Check the website for varying costs on private bookings and rentals.
For more information: www.homesteadsaunas.com/
Homestead Saunas – Sharon
Homestead Sauna runs wood-fired sauna sessions at its homebase “The Homestead” as well mobile sauna sessions elsewhere. Saunas are available for rent for public and private events. The business also advertises the Sauna Synergy Festival, a collaborative sauna gathering, planned for April 10 and 11 at Kettle Moraine Ranch, according to Instagram.
Where: The Homestead, 133 Martin St. Sharon, WI 53585
Cost: A general, 90-minute-long community session costs $22, according to the website. Costs vary for women’s and men’s sauna sessions, private sessions, and other events.
For more information: www.homesteadsaunas.com
Hot Island Sauna – Madeline Island
Hot Island Sauna rents saunas out to folks on Madeline Island any time of year. The business also offers custom sauna builds for both in-home and mobile units.
Where: Madeline Island
For more information: www.hotislandsauna.com
Hot Spell Sauna – McKinley Marina
From sunup to sundown all winter, employees of Hot Spell Sauna keep a pair of boxy wood-fired saunas warm at McKinley Marina as visitors trickle in to spend 75 minutes moving from time in the sauna to the chilly air, and the cold plunge in the marina if they’re bold.
Where: 1750 N. Lincoln Memorial Dr. Milwaukee, WI
Cost: A 75-minute session costs $39.92 including tax. Memberships and other services vary in price, check the website.
For more information: www.hotspellsauna.com/
Kiln (Chicago for the winter, Baileys Harbor for the summer)
Floating in Navy Pier Marina this winter, Kiln is owned and operated by Wisconsin-born Zoë Lake. The business is among the few floating saunas in the United States.
Where: Through the winter, Kiln is located at Navy Pier Marina in Chicago, IL at 797 E. Grand Ave. In the summer, Kiln is located at Gordon Lodge, 1420 Pine Dr., Baileys Harbor
Cost: Prices may vary, check on the business website. At the Chicago location, a 75-minute public session costs $90, and a 45-minute public session costs $50 for the winter 2025 to 2026 season.
For more information: www.kilnfloatingsauna.com
Kindled Community Sauna – Spring Green and Madison
Kindled Community Sauna is a mobile, wood-fired sauna and cold plunge experience in southwest of Madison, Wisconsin. The business offers community sauna sessions, private sessions, and sauna rentals around the area, often partnering with local businesses.
Where: Sessions occur around Southwestern Wisconsin.
Cost: Costs may vary, check the website for specific event costs. For example, a public session scheduled Feb. 20 through 22 at Working Draft Beer in Madison costs $30.
For more information: www.kindledcommunitysauna.com/
Nordic Night Community Sauna – Stevens Point
Nordic Night offers public and private community sauna sessions in Stevens Point.
Nicole Terrill and Abbey Laufenberg co-own the sauna business, which operates year-round and opened in June 2023.
“The purpose is deeper than it appears, it’s not a gym and it’s not a spa,” Terrill said. “The heat and the atmosphere provide for a grounding and attunement that people aren’t used to meeting each other at, they’re connecting at a different level.”
The business also offers special events and gender-specific sauna sessions. The “Iceberg Sessions” are facilitated for men, the “Queer Sauna” session is open to LGBTQ+ folks and allies, and the Sweaty Betty Sauna Sessions for women, trans women and non-binary or genderqueer people. All sessions are 18+.
Where: 1027 Union Street, Stevens Point, WI
Cost: One hour-long community sessions cost $23 Monday through Thursday, and $30 Friday through Sunday. Discount packages are available. Check online for the private session costs.
For more information: www.nordicnightsauna.com or call (715) 489 5361
Northern Lights Sauna – Wausau
Northern Lights Sauna is located outside at Newfound Power Gym in Wausau. The business announced it will close at the end of its season March 15, 2026, but there’s still time to try out a session until then.
“What began as a shared vision grew into a space rooted in wellness, restoration, and community,” according to the website. “We invite you to join us before we say goodbye.”
Where: 227307 Rib Mountain Drive, Wausau, WI 54401
Cost: For an hour-long public session, weekday rates cost $25 per person, weekends cost $30 per person. Check online for private session pricing.
For more information: www.northernlightswausau.com
Saunaday – Madison
Saunaday owners drew inspiration from the many cultures that have relied on bathhouses and saunas for thousands of years to bring Madison its own brick-and-mortar bathhouse. Among many offerings, Saunaday features cedar salt scrub showers, a Finnish sauna and a drop-in cold plunge pool.
Where: 315 S. Blount St. Madison, WI 53703
Cost: $55 for the 2-hour communal bathhouse experience. Check online for a cost break down per service, as prices vary.
For more information: www.sauna.day
Smokin’ Barrel – Madison
This mobile sauna business in Madison offers wood-fired saunas for rent. Public pop-up sauna sessions are also advertised online.
“We built this barrel to keep the Madison sauna community growing, whether it’s for backyard hangs, winter plunges, or milestone celebrations,” according to the website. Every booking includes delivery, setup, and a walkthrough of the service.
For more information: www.smokinbarrelsauna.com
The Hive Wellness & Social – Milwaukee area
The Hive Wellness & Social organizes guided communal sauna and cold plunge sessions around Milwaukee. The group joins contrast therapy, yoga, breathwork and personalized coaching to help people reach their full potential with the support of a group.
Where: Event locations vary, mostly around Milwaukee.
Cost: Costs vary, check the website
For more information: www.hivemke.com/
Tuli Sauna and Plunge – Paoli
Located on the banks of the Sugar River at Seven Acre Dairy Co., Tuli Sauna and Plunge is operational year-round. Riverside social sauna sessions are rooted in Nordic sauna traditions.
Where: 6858 Paoli Rd. Belleville, WI
Cost: A 1 hour and 20 minute-long social sauna session costs $39.00. Check online for membership packs and the costs of other offerings.
For more information: www.tulisaunaandplunge.com/
Are we missing a public sauna in Wisconsin that would be a good fit for this list? Email Bridget Fogarty at bfogarty@usatodayco.com.
Wisconsin
Worker in stable condition after crane accident at Madison construction site
A worker is in stable condition after a crane dropped a massive beam at the site of the future Wisconsin History Center on Madison’s Capitol Square, where construction is now paused.
The Madison Fire Department responded to the incident around 9:30 a.m. Jan. 31. A construction crane dropped a beam weighing 20,000 to 30,000 pounds, which fell about 50 feet through sublevels of construction.
One employee fell with the beam; he was taken to a hospital with critical injuries. It is unclear where he fell in relation to the beam. Crews rescued another, uninjured employee who was stranded with the crane above the site. No other injuries were reported.
The injured employee has not been identified. Findorff, a Madison-based construction company overseeing the project, said in a Feb. 1 statement that the worker is in stable condition at a nearby hospital.
“The health and safety of our employees and everyone on our job sites is our highest priority. Work on site has been paused, and we are working closely with local authorities and safety officials as we work to determine the cause of the incident,” Findorff said.
The fire department was dispatched to the corner of State Street and Fairchild Street, or the 100 Block of State Street.
That exact location lines up with a building that houses Ian’s Pizza, which is not under construction. But it’s across the street from the construction site for the future Wisconsin History Center.
The Wisconsin State Journal first reported the incident happened at the center’s buildout site.
A $106.5 million center is replacing the former state historical museum, which was demolished in late 2024. The new project broke ground in April 2025 and is expected to open in 2027.
The project is led by the Wisconsin Historical Society, which is simultaneously a state government agency and a private membership organization.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel requested comment from the Wisconsin Historical Society and asked the Occupational Safety and Health Administration whether it is investigating the incident.
The five-story, 100,000-square-foot facility will include a lobby, classrooms, rotating exhibits, permanent galleries and a rooftop terrace. The project received bipartisan support; former Govs. Jim Doyle and Tommy Thompson co-chaired the fundraising campaign.
Hope Karnopp can be reached at HKarnopp@usatodayco.com.
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