Minnesota
Private conservation crucial for Minnesota’s prairie remnants
To protect the prairie, property owners have to shield it from herbicide drift and invasive weeds, among other external threats, and they have to mimic natural periodic disturbances through controlled burns and grazing.
Now, Kaster is familiar with the routine that maintaining a prairie requires: He picks out native plants suitable for soil conditions, burns the land once every few years, mows down invasive species, and thins out his trees. With resources available from the DNR and other organizations like the Land Trust, Kaster can easily obtain information on prairie management, including seed sources and services for prairie installation.
Most conservation easement programs in Minnesota — including those run by the Land Trust and the Northern Tallgrass Prairie National Wildlife Refuge — are funded by the state’s Outdoor Heritage Fund, which can cover both the cost of acquiring the easement and the restoration work that follows.
Renay Leone, a landowner based in Elk River, is restoring native prairie on her family farm, backed by grant funding from the Land Trust. Her efforts began four years ago with a modest planting of native grasses. Last winter, she started to scale up the restoration by hiring a company to remove invasive vegetation — the first step in a five-year habitat management plan.
Before she retired, Leone spent a few years working at the Land Trust, where she deepened her passion for learning about prairies, native plantings, and pollinators.
Her best advice for restoring and maintaining a prairie? Patience. “Planting native plants, they might not look like much for a year or two,” she said.
Minnesota
Minnesota Duluth’s Max Plante wins men’s college hockey’s Hobey Baker Award
Was Wisconsin hockey’s win over North Dakota its best of the season?
How well is Wisconsin playing going into the national title game? Daniel Hauser and Ben Dexheimer weighed in after the win over North Dakota April 9.
Minnesota Duluth sophomore forward Max Plante is the winner of the 2026 Hobey Baker Award as the top player in men’s college hockey.
He edged fellow finalists, T.J. Hughes, a senior forward from Michigan, and Eric Pohlkamp, a junior defenseman from the University of Denver.
Plante scored 25 goals and had 52 points in 40 games in his second season with the Bulldogs. The 2024 second-round pick of the Detroit Red Wings finished third in NCAA Division I scoring behind Quinnipiac’s Ethan Wyttenbach (59) and Hughes (57).
He’s the first Minnesota Duluth player to win the award since Scott Perunovich in 2020 and the seventh overall.
Plante’s father, former NHL player Derek Plante, also played for Minnesota Duluth and was a Hobey Baker top 10 finalist in 1993.
Michigan State’s Trey Augustine was named the top goaltender in the Friday, April 10 ceremony. He went 24-9-1 for the Spartans with a 2.11 goals-against average and a .929 save percentage.
Wyttenbach was named college hockey’s rookie of the year.
Recent Hobey Baker Award winners
- 2026: F Max Plante, Minnesota Duluth
- 2025: F Isaac Howard, Michigan State
- 2024: F Macklin Celebrini, Boston University
- 2023: F Adam Fantilli, Michigan
- 2022: G Dryden McKay, Minnesota State
- 2021: F Cole Caufield, Wisconsin
- 2020: D Scott Perunovich, Minnesota Duluth
- 2019: D Cale Makar, UMass
- 2018: F Adam Gaudette, Northeastern
- 2017: D Will Butcher, Denver
- 2016: F Jimmy Vesey, Harvard
Minnesota
New strain of COVID detected in 25 states including Minnesota
Minnesota
Community members show up to support Mercado Central, businesses hit hard by ICE surge
Mercado Central on Lake Street in Minneapolis has been more than a marketplace; it’s a heartbeat, a place filled with food, culture and community. During Operation Metro Surge, that heartbeat slowed.
“We’re a co-op. We’re all business owners that just need support from our community,” Ajeleth Moreno with El Rincon Pupuseria said.
Many regular customers stopped coming and the change was impossible to ignore.
“Our regulars would not be here at all in the beginning months, but we did get really good support for the community,” Joscan Moreno said.
That community is showing up with purpose.
“I think it’s important to set an example and to show other community members that we are still here. We still need to be showing up and there’s so many beautiful examples of resilience out here today,” Rose Gomez said.
Through a wave of community support, online donations, to simply having people walk into their doors again.
“These places are few and far between, I don’t know if I know of any place exactly like this,” Simon Fitzkappes said. “And for our community to lose such a great spot, it’s really detrimental. We all hope that doesn’t happen.”
Because here, the business owners and diners alike say every visit and dollar matters.
“We’ve never got this many people here,” Ajeleth Moreno said. “We just hope it stays that way because we don’t want to be forgotten again.”
-
Atlanta, GA6 days ago1 teenage girl killed, another injured in shooting at Piedmont Park, police say
-
Education1 week agoVideo: Toy Testing with a Discerning Bodega Cat
-
Movie Reviews1 week agoVaazha 2 first half review: Hashir anchors a lively, chaos-filled teen tale
-
Georgia4 days agoGeorgia House Special Runoff Election 2026 Live Results
-
Pennsylvania4 days agoParents charged after toddler injured by wolf at Pennsylvania zoo
-
Arkansas17 hours agoArkansas TV meteorologist Melinda Mayo retires after nearly four decades on air
-
Milwaukee, WI5 days agoPotawatomi Casino Hotel evacuated after fire breaks out in rooftop HVAC system
-
Entertainment1 week agoInside Ye’s first comeback show at SoFi Stadium