Minnesota
Minnesota roadside pheasant count up 17% from last year
The annual summer season roadside depend for pheasants in Minnesota confirmed a 17% improve over 2021, the state Division of Pure Sources introduced Thursday.
The depend confirmed a mean of 48 pheasants per 100 miles of roadway pushed by wildlife employees in counties the place pheasants are current, up from 41 final 12 months.
That depend is also about 18% above the current 10-year common however nonetheless manner down from the long-term common of 90.6 pheasants per 100 miles.
Solely far southwestern Minnesota noticed a decline in birds, by 8%, from final 12 months’s roadside depend.
“The climate actually cooperated this 12 months by way of producing favorable nesting circumstances for pheasants,” mentioned Tim Lyons, DNR upland sport analysis scientist. “Pheasant numbers are typically pretty much as good or higher than final 12 months.”
Minnesota’s 2022 pheasant looking season runs Oct. 15 to Jan. 1.
Climate and habitat are the principle influences on Minnesota’s pheasant inhabitants traits, DNR wildlife officers mentioned. Climate causes annual fluctuations in pheasant numbers, whereas habitat drives long-term inhabitants traits. Presently, habitat — particularly the variety of acres enrolled within the federal Conservation Reserve Program — is diminished from peak pheasant years as excessive corn costs encourage farmers to plant extra crops and set much less land apart for wildlife.
Minnesota’s pheasant harvest dropped from 1.8 million birds in 1941 to only 226,679 birds by 2019 as grassland habitat declined quickly.
Monitoring pheasant inhabitants traits is a part of the DNR’s annual roadside wildlife survey, which started in 1955. Wildlife managers and conservation officers within the farmland areas conduct the survey in the course of the first half of August. This 12 months’s survey consisted of 166 routes that have been 25 miles lengthy, with 147 routes situated within the pheasant vary.
Observers drive every route early within the morning and file the variety of farmland wildlife sport species they see.
The “2022 August Roadside Survey” report, a map of pheasant looking prospects, information for different surveyed species, and data on looking rules and bag limits can be found on the DNR pheasant looking web page at
mndnr.gov/Searching/Pheasant
.
Minnesota
Unique northern Minnesota border airport closing after 70 years
A northern Minnesota airport with an unusual claim to fame is closing after 70 years of operation.
The Piney-Pinecreek Border Airport near Roseau is the only airport with a paved runway crossing the U.S.-Canada border.
The border airport opened in 1953 to expedite customs processing for air travelers and was regularly used by hunters and anglers flying to Canada.
Initially, the airport had a grass runway that ended at the border, but in 1978 a runway expansion added a paved runway that extended into Canada.
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Customs agents would meet travelers on either side of the border.
But declining usage and significant impending repair costs led to the decision to close the one of a kind operation, said Ryan Gaug, director of the Minnesota Department of Transportation aeronautics office.
“We know that the pavement condition has declined significantly over the years and will need a reconstruct most likely in the next one to three years,” said Gaug.
Short-term costs to bring the facility up to safety standards is estimated at $3.8 million.
Piney-Pinecreek is the only airport owned by MnDOT, and it is operated in collaboration with the Rural Municipality of Piney, Manitoba.
A Canadian official said the local government could not raise the money to pay its share of the planned improvement costs and Piney officials ended the joint operations agreement.
Gaug said an estimated 200 airplanes a year use the facility, far lower than traffic at similar sized facilities.
There are six airports on the U.S.-Canada border, but Piney-Pinecreek is the only one with a paved runway.
“It’s always been the No. 1 fun fact that I’ve shared with friends, family, coworkers, colleagues here at MnDOT,” said Gaug.
“It’s a tough decision to close an airport ever, but the evidence was all there that now was the time,” he said.
There are no local airplanes based at the airport.
“It’s very sad for the community to lose its airport,” said Marlin Elton, a local resident who served on the airport commission and helped maintain the facility for 30 years.
Elton said the closure hasn’t raised concerns in the community because “if you don’t fly, it won’t affect you. The ones who will be affected are the pilots who use it.”
Gaug said MnDOT reached out to pilots and aviation groups to gauge support for keeping the airport open but found “there just isn’t a strong user base for this airport and that also led to not a strong local support fighting to keep this airport.”
The final day of operations for the Piney-Pinecreek airport is Dec. 26.
Minnesota
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Minnesota
Party City to shutter hundreds of stores across the U.S., including 10 in Minnesota
Hit by headwinds including inflationary pressures, competition from e-commerce sites, big box retailers, pop-up stores and even a helium shortage, Party City is going out of business.
The closing of the nation’s largest party supply store, reported by CNN on Friday, is expected to shutter more than 700 retail stores in North America by the end of February, including 10 stores in Minnesota.
According to the company’s website, Party City has outlets in Apple Valley, Bloomington, Chanhassen, Coon Rapids, Maple Grove, Maplewood, Roseville, St. Cloud, St. Louis Park and Woodbury. Employees contacted at stores in Roseville, St. Cloud and Apple Valley said they had heard of the closing but could not comment.
Party City, which sells everything from balloons, costumes and birthday banners to gender reveal props and New Year’s Eve tiaras, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January 2023. That resulted in the cancellation of nearly $1 billion in debt.
The 38-year-old New Jersey-based company exited bankruptcy after naming a new CEO, Barry Litwin, in August. But the company was still contending with more than $800 million in debt, according to CNN. The New York Times reported the company employed more than 16,000 people.
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