Midwest
Minnesota declines Trump admin’s ultimatum to protect girls sports despite pleas from schools and athletes
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President Donald Trump’s administration’s deadline for Minnesota to amend its transgender athlete laws to protect girls sports came and went Friday, and the state declined the ultimatum during the current government shutdown.
Attorney General Keith Ellison’s office sent a letter to the department’s Office for Civil Rights and the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights Friday evening, saying it has no “substantive response” to the Trump administration’s demands to keep biological males out of girls sports. Ellison’s letter also cited the current government shutdown for its lack of response.
“The federal government is currently shut down and I understand employees in both Offices for Civil Rights are furloughed. As a result, the Minnesota Department of Education will not provide any substantive response at this time,” part of the letter read.
The deadline was given to the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) and Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL) after a transgender softball pitcher led a girls high school team to a state championship in the spring. But the Trump administration also cited instances of trans athletes competing in girls Alpine skiing, girls Nordic skiing, girls lacrosse, girls track and field team and girls volleyball in Minnesota.
The letter from Ellison’s office also expressed that it was “disappointed that the Joint Letter includes sensitive information about minors in a public document.” However, information about the trans softball pitcher has been public for months after the athlete did media interviews.
Maine and California declined similar ultimatums over the issue from the Trump administration earlier this year. As a result, the Department of Justice launched lawsuits against both of the state’s education agencies and school sports leagues.
Ellison’s office’s lack of substantive response to the ultimatum comes despite the fact that hundreds of Minnesota school board members penned an open letter urging the state to comply with Trump and change its policies to keep males out of girls sports.
As of Friday evening, 253 school board members from 105 Minnesota school boards signed the letter, citing concerns for girls’ privacy and safety, as well as potential federal funding cuts in response to the state’s noncompliance.
“As recipients of federal financial assistance, failure to correct these violations directly threatens our schools’ ability to serve our students and communities,” the letter from the school board members said.
“Compliance with Title IX is not only a legal obligation but also essential to maintaining the integrity of our educational and athletic programs.
“Protecting fairness in women’s sports is paramount. The federal determination highlights how permitting males to compete on female teams displaces female athletes from podiums, denies them advancement opportunities, and diminishes their visibility and recognition in competitions.
“Female students in our districts and across Minnesota deserve equal chances to excel in sports, free from unfair physical advantages that biological differences confer. By entering into the resolution agreement, MDE and MSHSL can ensure equal treatment and foster an environment where female athletes can thrive.”
Ellison has already filed his own lawsuit against Trump and the DOJ for trying to enforce its policies to protect girls sports in Minnesota. He has also bragged about “suing them first” over the issue.
INSIDE GAVIN NEWSOM’S TRANSGENDER VOLLEYBALL CRISIS
Meanwhile, the situation involving the softball player has already prompted another lawsuit by three teenage girls who have had to compete against the trans pitcher.
The lawsuit was filed by three anonymous female athletes against Ellison, Minnesota State High School League Executive Director Erich Martens, Minnesota Department of Human Rights Commissioner Rebecca Lucero and Minnesota Commissioner of Education Willie Jett.
One of the anonymous plaintiffs called out Ellison for supporting the policies that have allowed the trans pitcher to play against females.
“It’s really upsetting to know that [Ellison] isn’t taking the rights of girls and women seriously. He is allowing boys to compete with girls, and it is not safe and completely unfair,” the player previously told Fox News Digital. “To know that AG Ellison is in complete support of letting boys and men take advantage of females in sports is absolutely disgusting and wrong.”
The trans athlete threw a complete-game shutout, allowing just three hits and striking out six in the championship game, capping off a run that saw the trans athlete pitch all 21 innings across three state tournament games, giving up just two runs. The junior allowed just two runs across 35 total innings in the postseason.
One of the plaintiffs previously told Fox News Digital about what it was like playing against the trans athlete.
“Hitting against him is not only a physical challenge but a mental, too. It’s a mental battle knowing that he has an advantage in the sport that I grew up playing, making it hard to even want to hit against him,” the player said.
Former White Bear Lake High School softball player Kendall Kotzmacher previously told Fox News Digital that losing to a trans pitcher in the state tournament left her in tears.
Tim Walz, Kendall Kotzmacher and President Donald Trump (Getty Images/Fox News)
“How do you acknowledge that you lost to a biological male? How do you process those events that happened? And that was something that entire night. I still couldn’t do it. … We lost to a biological male in a female state tournament,” Kotzmacher said.
Kotzmacher also pointed out Gov. Tim Walz’s history as a high school football coach and seeing the physical prowess of male high school athletes up close.
“As a coach, you should see the differences and the vast differences that there are between biological males and biological females,” Kotzmacher told Fox News Digital.
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Missouri
Missouri reports 43 cases of parasitic infection that’s sickened thousands nationwide
Missouri health officials are investigating dozens of confirmed or probable cases of cyclosporiasis, the intestinal infection that has sickened thousands of people across the country this summer.
As of Sunday, the state Department of Health and Senior Services logged 43 cases of the infection, which causes diarrhea and other digestive symptoms. The department data does not include where in the state cases have been reported.
Missouri has a relatively small number of reported cases compared to Michigan and other states at the center of the outbreak.
Illinois health officials have reported 216 cases of the infection, according to the state’s health department. In Michigan, which has the most reported cases, health officials have logged more than 3,700 cyclospora infections.
Officials expect that number to go up as more people are tested. Because people with diarrhea rarely go to the doctor and even fewer of those people receive the necessary stool sample test, it’s likely more people are infected.
Local health departments are following up with patients to get their food and travel history, which could help identify where the parasite came from.
Cyclosporiasis can cause watery diarrhea, nausea and dehydration. Unlike other illnesses caused by food-borne pathogens, fever and vomiting are relatively rare symptoms. Most people recover from the infection without treatment, but antibiotics can clear the infection.
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, no deaths have been reported due to the current outbreak.
Cyclospora, a parasite that can only be seen through a microscope, is spread through human feces. Past outbreaks have been linked to leafy greens, but officials have not yet found the cause of this year’s outbreak.
People can prevent the illness by thoroughly washing produce, cutting off bruised or damaged bits and refrigerating cut fruits and vegetables. Heat kills the parasite, so cooking vegetables can also cut down on risk.
Nebraska
Roanoke County teen heads to national rodeo finals in Nebraska
ROANOKE COUNTY, Va. (WDBJ) – A Bent Mountain teenager will compete at the National High School Rodeo Finals in Lincoln, Neb., later this month after qualifying with the Virginia High School Rodeo Association.
Kellen Hamm, a dual-enrolled homeschooled Roanoke County senior, graduated this May with a 4.2 GPA. She will compete at the national finals July 18–25 in four events: breakaway roping, team roping, barrel racing and pole bending.
Seventh state title in pole bending
Hamm recently claimed her seventh consecutive Virginia state championship in pole bending, riding her horse Tucker. Winning seven straight state titles in the same event on the same horse is considered a rare accomplishment in high school rodeo competition.
College plans
Hamm has been accepted to Murray State University in Kentucky, where she plans to enroll this fall. She will pursue a degree in elementary education and compete on Murray State’s collegiate rodeo team.
To follow Hamm’s progress at the National High School Rodeo Finals, visit the event’s official website online.
Copyright 2026 WDBJ. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
Neighbors, not competitors
There are moments that remind us exactly who we are as a community, and the recent fire at Antelope Creek Bar and Grill in Mooreton was one of them. Many already know the awful loss that unfolded. It was a brutally hot day, the kind where the sun feels heavy and the air is so thick, and social media quickly filled with photos, videos, and comments documenting the devastation. Heartbreaking. Gut‑wrenching. A place that held memories for so many suddenly only visions smoke and charred remains.
But even in the middle of all that loss, something else rose up, something that always seems to show itself around here when life gets hard. Kindness. Pure, steady kindness.
The volunteer firefighters were the first reminder. They never cease to amaze me. They drop everything … work, family, whatever they were in the middle of and suit up in layers of gear despite the heat and humidity. They’re regular people with regular jobs, yet they show up like it’s the most natural thing in the world. No spotlight. No applause. Just service. Just heart.
Then came the folks who arrived with water, Gatorade, and anything they could think of to help ease the burden of those battling the blaze. Nobody organized it. Nobody asked. They simply showed up because that’s what people do here. That alone would have been enough to warm my heart.
But it didn’t stop there.
As the day went on, I saw posts from other regional businesses, specifically other bar and grills, reaching out with messages of support. These are places that could easily be seen as competition, yet there they were, offering help, extending care, and standing shoulder to shoulder with the owners who had just watched their livelihood disappear. “We are here. How can we help?” they wrote. No rivalry. No hesitation. Just neighbors being neighbors.
If you ever need a reminder of what makes this valley special, it’s moments like that. People who could have stayed quiet choosing instead to lift someone else up. Businesses that could have focused on themselves choosing instead to stand with another in their darkest moment. It’s the best of us. The part of small town life that doesn’t make headlines but makes all the difference.
We talk a lot about community, but this, this right here is what it looks like. It looks like firefighters sweating through their gear on a 90‑degree day. It looks like strangers handing out cold drinks. It looks like business owners reaching across the aisle to say, “You’re not alone.” It looks like compassion showing up before anyone has time to think twice.
Loss has a way of revealing character. And what I saw in the wake of that fire was a valley full of people who still believe in showing up, still believe in helping, still believe in each other. In a world that can feel divided and loud, this quiet, steady goodness is worth noticing. Worth celebrating. Worth holding onto.
Because when the smoke clears and the debris settles, what remains is the strength of a community that refuses to let anyone face hardship alone. And that, more than anything, is the story worth telling.
That is the true Best of the Valley. The people.
Bobbi Steffens resides in the Southern Valley and discovered her passion for writing through an unexpected path.
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