Milwaukee, WI
Want to be a lifeguard? Another Milwaukee County Parks free training session begins next week
‘Meadow’ installation blooms at Milwaukee Art Museum
Created by the duo DRIFT, the ‘Meadow’ installation blooms likes wildflowers on an unpredictable schedule at Milwaukee Art Museum.
Milwaukee Art Museum
Milwaukee County Park’s second free lifeguard training session begins next week.
There’s been an ongoing lifeguard shortage, which was greatly exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic. As a result, the county has not been able to open all of its summer swimming facilities since 2019, a Milwaukee County Parks official told the Journal Sentinel last May.
However, there was an uptick last year. In May, the Journal Sentinel reported county lifeguard staff increased to 136, up 36% from 2023.
Want to get involved this summer? Here’s what to know about lifeguard training in Milwaukee County:
When are the lifeguard training sessions?
The first session was earlier this month.
According to the department’s website, there will be three free training sessions through April. Recruits must pass the mandatory exam at the end of their designated session in order to move on to an emergency medical responder course.
Sessions for the emergency medical responder course will be available beginning in early June.
Here is the training schedule:
Session 2
Location: Pulaski Pool, 2701 S. 16th St.
Date: Feb. 4 to Feb. 20 on Tuesday and Thursday
Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Exam Date: Saturday, Feb. 22 at 7 a.m.
Session 3
Location: Noyes Pool, 8235 W. Good Hope Road
Date: Feb. 25 to March 13 on Tuesday and Thursday
Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Exam Date: Saturday, March 15 at 7 a.m.
Session 4
Location: Pulaski Pool, 2701 S. 16th St.
Date: March 31 to April 18 on Monday and Wednesday
Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Exam Date: Saturday, April 19 at 7 a.m.
How can I sign up for lifeguard training?
You can sign up for lifeguard training here.
Is there an age requirement to be a lifeguard?
Yes. To qualify for training, you must be at least 15 years old and must be 16 years old by your hire date, according to the Milwaukee County Parks website.
What other qualifications must Milwaukee County lifeguards meet?
Aside from the age requirement, those interested in being lifeguards must be able to swim 100 meters in one minute 45 seconds or less and be “in good physical condition,” according to the department’s website.
How much do lifeguards get paid?
Lifeguards in Milwaukee County get paid $17.13 an hour, according to the Milwaukee County Parks website.
For more information on becoming a lifeguard in Milwaukee County:
You can find more information on becoming a lifeguard on the Milwaukee County Parks website here.
Claire Reid and Vanessa Swales contributed to this report.
Milwaukee, WI
Government shutdown ends but Milwaukee flyers still face cancellations
MILWAUKEE – The nation’s six-week government shutdown – the longest in U.S. history – came to an end Wednesday night, but its fallout is still rippling through the aviation system.
What we know:
TSA officers resigned during the stalemate, and more than 10,000 flights were canceled in the past week.
Airline schedules remain thin with Thanksgiving approaching. Cancellations are already affecting Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport, including flights to Boston, Newark and O’Hare.
What they’re saying:
Darrell English, a TSA officer and union representative for workers in Wisconsin and Illinois, said the loss of experienced staff has created lasting gaps.
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“Those people that have years in and experience level, and you lose that, that becomes a gap because that’s the experience level that takes years to build up to be able to replace,” English said.
Air traffic controllers also worked without pay throughout the shutdown. Adam Uhan, a commercial pilot, former Air Force pilot and leader of The Pilot Network with about 30,000 members, said the controllers remained steady through the strain.
“The most unsung of the heroes, the people that nobody ever sees or meets are the air traffic controllers,” Uhan said. “They did outstanding work throughout the shutdown.”
Uhan said frustration with the system was felt on the ground and in the cockpit.
“If you feel frustrated, your crew, the people that are working the gate, the people who are working in the bags, the air traffic controllers, they feel your frustration,” he said.
Last week, the Federal Aviation Administration directed major cuts at 40 of the nation’s busiest airports – beginning with a 4% reduction and originally slated to reach 10%. With the shutdown over, the Department of Transportation capped the cuts at 6% to relieve the pressure on controllers.
Dig deeper:
Even so, Uhan said he felt safe in the skies.
“Safety was never, ever an issue in my mind. What was an issue in my mind was the people that were involved and their wellbeing. And as things progressed, if they got worse, more people were going to have to find other options to make those ends meet,” he said. “I never feared for my safety because I know the professionals that are involved, and they are simply some of the best people I’ve ever worked with in my life who could have done a number of other things at a very high level, but they chose this path because aviation is just, it’s like a calling.”
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English cautioned that workers face long-term financial consequences.
“People have to realize that this is not going to be a quick fix, because officers had had devastated their credit ratings, their livelihood. They got behind on bills because of this. And it’s going to take a while for them to actually get themselves out of this hole. An additional on top of that. This may repeat itself in January,” English said. “They’re still struggling to get out of this hole. So when you see these officers, don’t think that, okay, you’re going to get paid, you should be good. It’s not good because these officers now are in debt, to someone or some other agency that they owe money to. So be patient with them. They still have a lot of issues on their mind or how they want to get things paid back. And again, they had that problem down the line in January. How do I prepare for that?”
What’s next:
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said air traffic controllers may receive partial pay within days. The Trump administration said backpay for federal workers could begin this weekend and continue into the middle of next week.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem handed out $10,000 bonus checks to TSA agents she said “served with exemplary service” in Texas on Thursday, with more bonuses potentially on the way. Air traffic controllers may also receive bonuses as flights try to ramp back toward normal levels ahead of the holidays.
The Source: FOX6 News spoke with TSA officer and union representative Darrell English, as well as Adam Uhan, a commercial pilot and leader of The Pilot Network.
Milwaukee, WI
Whitnall graduate Danilo Jovanovich shines but UWM gets blown out by Indiana
UWM men’s basketball coach Bart Lundy explains pride in first 3 season
Bart Lundy marks his fourth season as head coach of the Panthers in 2025-25. Here’s what he feels best about over the first three.
The Indiana Hoosiers might be a problem for college basketball this season. Just ask the teams residing in the 414.
Three days after the Hoosiers laid a beating on Marquette, they turned their sights to its neighbors on the east side and beat the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 101-70, at Assembly Hall on Nov. 12.
The Panthers managed to hang with the new-look, high-octane Hoosiers most of the first half and even a bit into the final 20 minutes before first-year head coach Darian DeVries’ crew ran their visitors out of the gym and into their next difficult non-conference challenge down the stretch.
BOX SCORE: Indiana 101, UWM 70
Indiana became the first team to hang 100 points on Milwaukee since Oakland hit that mark on Jan. 4, 2024, doing so with four players scoring in double digits, led by Lamar Wilkerson’s 24. The Hoosiers have now put up 100 points or more in back-to-back games after doing so in a 23-point win over Marquette Nov. 9. They shot 56.7% from the field against the Panthers, who struggled to keep them from clean looks from deep early and in the paint late.
“To come here someone’s going to have to score 90 to have a chance to win,” Panthers head coach Bart Lundy said.
Despite being outmanned, Milwaukee still shot 46.8% from the field with Danilo Jovanovich (18 points) and Seth Hubbard (17 points) leading the charge.
“A lot of positives to take out of the game,” Lundy sai. “I thought the atmosphere and some of the adversity we handled pretty well. We absorbed the scouting report. We had some chances to make it a much closer game. They’re a really good team. They can really score. They made us pay for every mistake that we made. They hurt us with some things we knew we were going to have to give up.”
Three-point defense lacks in first half
If there was one thing the Panthers couldn’t do against the Hoosiers, it was allowing open looks from three. It turned out to be a far too common sight in the first half.
Indiana hit 9 of its 14 attempts from deep in the first half, with Wilkerson, a certified marksman who hit 10 threes in the Hoosiers’ first two games, left with space to operate too many times on his way to sinking five. Those looks came in a variety of ways, with being untagged in transition to too much space with the shot clock winding down, but Lundy thought the Panthers otherwise did a good job of following the scouting report against him.
“We were keyed in on him and (Tucker) DeVries,” Lundy said. “Wilkerson got us on a couple of turnovers. Both those guys are NBA shooters.”
While the Panthers buckled down on Indiana’s perimeter attack in the second half – keeping Wilkerson without a triple over the final 20 minutes – their defensive issue became attempting to contain the Hoosiers in the paint. Indiana made 11 of 16 two-point field goals in the period while going to the free throw line 17 times thanks to 12 Milwaukee fouls.
The team defense left something to be desired, but it wasn’t all bad.
Jovanovich showcased some stopper potential on DeVries, who torched Marquette for 27 points and is a potential all-American, in the first half and Tate Mackenzie stepped forward to give the Panthers some rim protection that was absent the first three games of the year. The reserve big man and former Michigan football recruit showcased his athleticism with three blocks in 10 minutes.
“He and Faizon (Fields) at the rim were phenomenal. Both of them were walls,” Lundy said. “You want to learn from these types of games, and we’re learning that Tate’s really pretty good.”
Indiana is going to give plenty of opponents fits with its scoring prowess in the months to come, but nevertheless the total effort wasn’t one that Lundy walked away from feeling good about – and that’s the third time that has happened through four games.
Danilo Jovanovich shines
On his way to leading Milwaukee in scoring, Jovanovich put together a sequence on offense that displayed his top-end ability.
The Panthers had been within six points at 31-25 before the Hoosiers rattled off rapid 11-2 run in less than two minutes. With the arena rocking on the heels of an off-the-glass alley-oop to Reed Bailey to put Milwaukee in a 15-point hole, the ball went to Jovanovich at the top of the key. He slowly backed down DeVries and as the shot clock neared zero calmly hit a fadeaway off one leg in slow motion.
That bucket slowed the roll of the Hoosiers momentarily, sparking a 9-2 run to draw the Panthers within 43-36 with two minutes to go in the first half.
Defensively, Jovanovich was tasked with guarding DeVries and held him to just two points in the first half by presenting him with a physical challenge off the dribble and not allowing his shifty back cuts to work. DeVries hit a pair of threes in the second half to finish with 12 points but was, on the whole, outdueled by Jovanovich.
“I thought D-Lo did an unreal job on DeVries,” Lundy said. “This was D-Lo’s best college game on both sides of the ball, to play like that against an all-American.”
Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee travelers feel the impact of government shutdown on holiday flights
MILWAUKEE, Wis. — Travelers at Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport are facing significant disruptions to their holiday plans as the longest government shutdown in U.S. history continues to impact flight operations nationwide.
Nijeale Wilson experienced firsthand the ripple effects of FAA flight reductions when her flight to Pennsylvania to visit her son was canceled. The airline rebooked her on another flight, but it landed much farther from her intended destination.
“I had to rebook, so because of that I had to drive an hour and a half to get to my destination,” Wilson said. “It was frustrating at first, but of course, I roll with the punches.”
The disruptions extend far beyond individual inconveniences, according to travel industry professionals who are seeing widespread effects on their clients’ plans.
“When a plane doesn’t get from point A to point B, or a crew doesn’t get from point A to point B, it causes a ripple effect that can affect many flights down the line for days or weeks,” said Abby Rosenau, a vacation travel advisor with Fox World Travel.
Rosenau has watched her clients grapple with delays and cancellations as uncertainty continues.
“There is a lot of fear and a lot of uncertainty right now because we really don’t know. And even if this all ends — you know, the government shutdown ends — we don’t know how long it will take to ramp back up to, quote-unquote, normal operations,” Rosenau said.
A funding bill that would end the government shutdown is heading to the House for a final vote. However, even if the shutdown ends soon, there will be lasting effects on travel operations.
For travelers with upcoming holiday plans, Rosenau recommends several precautionary steps:
- Know your rights as a traveler by reading the fine print of your ticket.
- Call the airline ahead of your flight.
- Turn notifications on for flight updates.
- Come up with a plan B in case of delays or cancellations.
Wilson, who has now decided to stay home for the holidays, advises fellow travelers to exercise extra patience during this challenging time.
“Try to plan ahead — well ahead, more than usual. Try to get to the airport early. Keep checking your flights for those ones that might be changed at the last minute or canceled,” Wilson said.
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