Minnesota
Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center celebrates 40 years
The Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center, or MIWRC, celebrated its 40th anniversary this week in Minneapolis. The center was established in 1984 out of a need for addiction treatment centers that focused on care for Native women in Minnesota.
Since its founding, the nonprofit has expanded its offerings with services and programs such as support groups, family services and housing assistance. The center’s mission is to empower Native women and their families.
“Healing is at the heart of everything we’re doing,” said CEO Ruth Buffalo. The programs the center offers are committed to traditional ways of providing support rooted in cultural values.
Buffalo said their leadership is grounded in the community and the community’s desire to help fellow members through hardships that are seen in Native communities such as addiction and violence.
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“I believe MIWRC continues to stand as a true pillar in the community,” Buffalo said, “I think of it as place where people can come and get nurturing, get loved, get their basic needs met and continue to thrive from there.”
One program that the center offers is emergency housing, which Buffalo said is often the most used program that is offered. Emergency housing is located on the top two floors of the center’s building.
Currently there are 14 units available but plans to expand to 24 units are in the works. Among the 24 units, four will be permanent housing for those with disabilities.
Buffalo says construction is planned to start in late October and will open in July 2025.
MIWRC was recently presented with recognition from Gov. Tim Walz and Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan for leading 40 years of culturally grounded services and programming.
“We are here to serve the community. Our doors are open, and we’ll continue to help the best way we can,” Buffalo says.
Minnesota
Not Minnesota nice: GOP congressman playing Tim Walz in debate prep with JD Vance argues he's an 'empty suit'
Ask House Majority Whip Rep. Tom Emmer about Gov. Tim Walz, a fellow Minnesotan and Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate, and the five-term Republican congressman jokingly takes a shot.
“I didn’t realize that Tim Walz and I are around the same age. He looks so much older,” the 63-year-old Emmer said about the 60-year-old Walz.
Emmer was answering a question during a Fox News Digital interview about whether Emmer was playing the role of the Minnesota governor in debate prep with GOP vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance of Ohio because they’re both from the same state and similar ages.
Emmer, a one-time college hockey player and attorney who serves as the No. 3 Republican in the U.S. House, shared that he and Vance had not yet [as of Thursday afternoon when he spoke to Fox News Digital] conducted a mock debate.
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“We’re going to get together at some point,” he said, declining to add any details or specifics on the mock session with Vance ahead of Tuesday’s vice presidential debate in New York City.
But Emmer, who steered the House Republicans’ campaign committee in the 2020 and 2022 cycles, had plenty of criticism of Harris and Walz.
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“It’s an honor to be asked to play a very small part in helping JD and President Trump expose the failures of Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.”
Emmer argued “the hardest part of playing Walz … is trying to tell lies with a straight face, because that’s what he does. He’s good at the debate game, but there isn’t substance there. There’s a lot of air.”
Emmer and Walz overlapped for four years in the House before Walz won election in 2018 as Minnesota’s governor.
“I do know him probably as well or better than most on the Republican side. And I can tell you that Minnesotans, people at home, know better than anyone that we can’t afford four years of a Harris-Walz administration in the White House,” Emmer emphasized.
And Emmer claimed “it’s very clear today that the Tim Walz that was here in Congress was literally, he was a fraud. He was playing the character of a Greater Minnesota ag-friendly outdoorsman who really cared about the people. Since then, he’s made it very clear to people in Greater Minnesota that he has very little interest in them.
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“It doesn’t get reported enough, but under Walz, Minnesota’s taxes have skyrocketed. Violent crime is up all over, and our communities are worse off,” Emmer argued. “No amount of Minnesota nice … is going to make up for Tim Walz’s failed policy record.”
Emmer claimed that “Walz is an empty suit who has worked to turn Minnesota into Harris’ home state of California. … This guy is Gavin Newsom wearing a flannel shirt.”
A Republican hasn’t carried Minnesota in a presidential election since President Richard Nixon’s 1972 landslide re-election over a half century ago. It was the only state President Reagan lost in his 1984 re-election landslide.
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Asked if Minnesota is in play in the presidential race, Emmer said, “Are we going to be close enough that Donald Trump has a chance to be the first Republican presidential candidate to win Minnesota since 1972? I think the answer is yes.”
Emmer noted that polls suggest Harris’ margin in Minnesota over Trump has dropped since she named Walz as her running mate early last month.
“He’s not popular in Minnesota. I think by picking Tim Walz, they may have put Minnesota in play,” Emmer argued.
Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.
Minnesota
Obituary for Reverend Dale Loren Phelps at Czaplewski Family Funeral Homes & Crematory ~ Kasson
Minnesota
Fall colors starting to change in parts of Minnesota
MINNESOTA (Valley News Live) – The fall colors are slowly starting to change across parts of the valley.
The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources has a fall color map where you can track the leaf progression and see where and when the fall colors will peak.
The yellow shaded areas are where leaves are 25-50% changed. The lighter green is 10-25%.
You can also select future dates to see when the leaves in your area might change. The DNR says the estimates are based on historical averages.
Click here to find fall programs in Minnesota State Parks, upload your photos of fall colors, read the fall colors forecast or compare colors across the years.
MN DNR Fall Colors Forecast
Dull or earthy fall colors can be caused by drought or leaf disease. Mild summer drought can enhance fall colors, but a severe drought usually dulls them considerably, with the lack of water causing foliage to turn straw-colored and die early. Since early June 2024, the entire state of Minnesota has been drought-free.
The best fall colors usually follow a growing season that had average precipitation. Although our excessively wet spring caused leaf diseases on some species like aspen and oaks, it fortunately didn’t cause much leaf loss. After Minnesota’s 2023 drought, this year’s rainy growing season means trees have the potential to maximize their color production in the fall.
The weather in September also has a big impact on the shades we’ll see. Leaves are more likely to display brilliant colors when the days are sunny and the nights are cool (between 32-45 °F), without big swings in temperature. Light frosts can help, but a hard freeze or early snow could stop the show in its tracks.
Copyright 2024 KVLY. All rights reserved.
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