Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee Brewers announce 2025 schedule, open season against the Yankees
(MILWAUKEE BREWERS) – The Milwaukee Brewers today announced the team’s 2025 regular-season schedule, which begins Thursday, March 27 against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. The home opener is slated for Monday, March 31 against the Kansas City Royals at American Family Field.
Milwaukee will open on the road for a fourth consecutive year, continuing its longest stretch beginning the season away from home since a 10-year run from 1996-2005.
The Brewers will face the Yankees on Opening Day for the fourth time in franchise history. Milwaukee hosted New York at County Stadium in 1976 and traveled to Yankee Stadium in 1977 and 1979. It will be the earliest Opening Day game (March 27) in team history, which previously was March 28 in 2019.
Following the opening series in New York against the Yankees (March 27, 29-30), the Brewers will host the Kansas City Royals (March 31-April 2) and Cincinnati Reds (April 3-6) for the first homestand of the season.
Starting in 2025, teams will play two, 3-game series against their rivals instead of two, 2-game series. The Brewers will face the Minnesota Twins from May 16-18 at American Family Field and from June 20-22 at Target Field.
In addition to the Royals and Twins, the Brewers will host the Detroit Tigers (April 14-16), the Athletics (April 18-20), Houston Astros (May 5-7), Baltimore Orioles (May 19-21), Boston Red Sox (May 26-28) and Los Angeles Angels (Sept. 16-18) in Interleague Play.
Along with the Yankees, Milwaukee will play road Interleague games in 2025 against the Chicago White Sox (April 29-May 1), Tampa Bay Rays (May 9-11), Cleveland Guardians (May 12-14), Seattle Mariners (July 21-23), Toronto Blue Jays (Aug. 29-31) and Texas Rangers (Sept. 8-10).
The team’s longest road trip of the season will come April 21-May 1 with 10 games in 11 days against the San Francisco Giants (April 21-24), St. Louis Cardinals (April 25-27) and Chicago White Sox (April 29-May 1). The Brewers have just one additional road trip of over 6 games next season, a 7-game stretch against the Cincinnati Reds (Aug. 15-17) and Chicago Cubs (Aug.18-21).
Milwaukee’s longest homestand of 2025 is 10 games from June 6-15 against the San Diego Padres (June 6-8), Atlanta Braves (June 9-11) and St. Louis Cardinals (June 12-15). Along with the opening homestand of the season, the Brewers will play one additional 7-game homestand at American Family Field against the San Francisco Giants (Aug. 22-24) and Arizona Diamondbacks (Aug. 25-28).
For the full schedule, please click here. Home and road game times will be announced at a later date. Game dates are subject to change.
Milwaukee, WI
Travelers see shorter lines at Milwaukee Mitchell despite the ongoing partial government shutdown
MILWAUKEE — Despite a partial government shutdown causing long TSA lines at airports across the country, travelers at Milwaukee Mitchell airport are experiencing short wait times ahead of spring break.
John Wahlen and his colleague Joe Orendorf were coming back home from North Carolina and prepared for a much different scene.
“We were remarkably surprised that it was as easy as it was,” Wahlen said.
Brendyn Jones/TMJ4
A national TSA spokesperson told TMJ4 that over 3,450 TSA officers called out across the country on Thursday. The national call-out rate was at 11.83% percent, the highest since the shutdown began.
While the TSA could not provide specific numbers for Milwaukee Mitchell, the airport was not in the top-10 for call-out rates.
The highest percentages of call-offs came from much larger airports, including George Bush Intercontinental in Houston at 44 percent, Atlanta at almost 41 percent, and Baltimore at 37 percent.
“We were in smaller airports, Raleigh-Durham, I think we waited for two people, and one of them was him,” Orendorf said.
Watch: Travelers see shorter lines at Milwaukee Mitchell despite the ongoing partial government shutdown
Travelers see shorter lines at Milwaukee Mitchell despite the ongoing partial government shutdown
A spokesperson for Milwaukee Mitchell told TMJ4 that around 11,000 people are expected this Friday and Saturday, and next Friday and Saturday as spring break travel peaks.
President Trump signed an executive order to pay TSA agents, meaning a resolution may be on the horizon. Travelers, including Selena Mauricio, said they are thankful for the agents who are still showing up.
Brendyn Jones/TMJ4
“Their jobs aren’t easy, and I commend the ones that still come to work, definitely,” Mauricio said.
This story was reported on-air by Brendyn Jones and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
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Milwaukee, WI
Truck drives in to Grace Coffee in Milwaukee’s Historic Third Ward overnight
MILWAUKEE — A truck drove through the Grace Coffee Co. in Milwaukee’s Historic Third Ward on early Friday morning, the owners announced in a social media post.
Due to the extensive damage that was done, the coffee shop will be closed until further notice.
TMJ4
“We’re incredibly grateful no one was hurt, and we’ll keep you updated as we begin repairs,” the coffee shop said in the post.
TMJ4 reached out to the Milwaukee Police Department but have yet to hear back.
Let’s talk:
Hey there! At TMJ4 News, we’re all about listening to our audience and tackling the stuff that really matters to you. Got a story idea, tip, or just want to chat about this piece? Hit us up using the form below. For more ways to get in touch, head over to tmj4.com/tips.
It’s about time to watch on your time. Stream local news and weather 24/7 by searching for “TMJ4” on your device.
Available for download on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, and more.
Report a typo or error // Submit a news tip
Milwaukee, WI
MPS layoffs plan draws pushback as district works to close $46M gap
MPS cuts face backlash
Milwaukee Public Schools plans about 200 layoffs to close a $46 million budget gap, but union leaders say cuts could impact student safety while district leaders say no classroom teachers will be eliminated.
MILWAUKEE – Milwaukee Public Schools is planning to cut roughly 200 positions next school year as the district works to close a multi-million-dollar budget gap — but there’s disagreement over which roles will be impacted.
What we know:
District leaders say the goal is to close a roughly $46 million shortfall, prompting changes that Superintendent Brenda Cassellius says are necessary.
Milwaukee Public Schools said about 201 staff members will be impacted. District leaders say no classroom teachers, counselors or social workers will be cut — something the teachers’ union disputes.
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The reductions stem from a previously approved plan to eliminate about 260 non-classroom roles. The final number dropped after retirements and existing vacancies. The Milwaukee Board of School Directors approved that plan on March 9.
What they’re saying:
“We have a $50 million deficit, we are for sure not going to be able to do business the same way that we’ve been able to do business,” Cassellius said. “Change is just hard. It’s just hard. And every single one of our employees is so important.”
But some educators say the cuts go too far.
“MTEA is setting up a distress signal. We are talking about our teachers, art teachers, music teachers, physical education teachers, counselors — things that the voters of referendum of Milwaukee actually voted for,” said Ingrid Walker-Henry, president of the Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association. “Staffing is being cut to the extent that they are concerned about student safety.”
Cassellius acknowledged the uncertainty and asked school leaders for patience.
“We just have to for sure know our budget situation, where we’re at with that after these cuts are made in order to make those decisions,” she said. “So I’m asking my principals, be patient with us.”
By the numbers:
The district outlined the 201 affected positions as:
- 70 central office roles
- 62 educators with a teaching license but not assigned to one classroom
- 59 assistant principals
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MPS says the savings will support new class size guidelines, including:
- 18 students per teacher in K3
- 20 students per teacher in K4
- 22 students per teacher in K5
Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS)
District leaders say no students will be asked to leave a school to meet class size guidelines. Officials say they are working with schools that may not have space or that require larger classes based on specific programs.
What’s next:
Milwaukee Public Schools plans to present its proposed 2026–27 budget to the Milwaukee Board of School Directors in May.
The Source: Information in this post was provided by Milwaukee Public Schools and prior FOX6 coverage.
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