Minnesota
Sheriff’s deputy, 3 others injured in fiery crash on north-central Minnesota

A Crow Wing County Sheriff’s deputy and three others were injured in a three-vehicle, fiery collision Monday, July 24, on Highway 371 north of Baxter.
The crash happened about 2 p.m. in the southbound lane of Highway 371, just south of Barbeau Road, and blocked that side of the highway for more than an hour.
According to the Minnesota State Patrol, a Buick Regal driven by Charlotte Elaine Zimmerman, 78, Brainerd, was stopped in the left lane on southbound Highway 371 near Barbeau Road. A Dodge Durango, driven by Jeffrey Alan Miller, 59, Minneapolis, was stopped behind the Regal. A Crow Wing County Sheriff’s Ford Explorer squad vehicle, driven by Matthew Wayne Jorgens, 42, of Nisswa, rear-ended the Durango, pushing the Durango into the Regal.
“The squad car did start on fire and was a total loss” the Crow Wing County Sheriff’s office reported. “The deputy involved did have minor injuries and was transported to the St. Joseph Hospital.”
Zimmerman, Jeffrey Miller and a passenger in Jeffrey Miller’s vehicle, Ronda Rae Miller, 58, Minneapolis, were also transported by North Ambulance to Essentia Health-St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Brainerd for treatment of non life-threatening injuries.
The Crow Wing County Sheriff’s Office, Baxter Police Department and Brainerd Fire Department also responded to the crash.

Minnesota
Minnesota Department of Health announces layoffs amid federal funding cuts

The Minnesota Department of Health announced layoffs and reductions in public health services on Tuesday due to cuts in federal funding.
The agency issued layoffs and separation notices to 170 employees whose positions were supported by federal grants that have now been terminated. Additionally, offers have been rescinded for 20 new hires.
Notices will also be given to other staff members who are at risk of layoffs, affecting approximately 300 employees in total within the health department.
The layoffs and separations result from an unexpected decision by the federal government last week to cut more than $220 million in previously approved funding for the health department.
“We are working now to figure out how much of this critical public health work we can save and continue,” Dr. Brooke Cunningham, the Minnesota commissioner of health, said in a statement.
The Minnesota Department of Health said that several services and programs across the agency will be affected by the layoffs, including the state’s efforts in response to measles and bird flu, wastewater surveillance, community clinics and vaccination initiatives. The cuts will also limit support for nursing homes and reduce funding for tribal public health services.
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Minnesota
Minnesota weather: Road conditions slick in western, northern Minnesota

(FOX 9) – A storm system bringing rain and snow through Minnesota on Tuesday into Wednesday is producing slick roads in areas of western and northern Minnesota.
April Fools weather
What’s next:
A winter storm warning is in place for northern regions of Minnesota, which could see 4-6+ inches of accumulation.
Meanwhile, a winter weather advisory is in place for parts of central and northwestern Minnesota, where 2–3 inches of snow and some icing is possible.
The Twin Cities metro will experience a wintry mix and some snow, which could bring a minor accumulation of slush and make for a slippery and messy evening commute. The rain-snow mix will linger through the evening, along with potential freezing rain. Once temperatures slowly rise after midnight, the mix will transition to rain.
But any accumulation won’t last long, as temperatures climb again on Wednesday and rain will continue to help any snow melt.
Road conditions
Big picture view:
According to the Minnesota Department of Transportation’s (MnDOT) website, as of 3 p.m. several western Minnesota regions were experiencing partially covered roads with mixed snow ice or slush.
Both Stevens and Big Stone counties remain under winter condition warnings by MnDOT officials.
Further north in western Minnesota, both Otter Tail and Becker counties remain under the same warning.
Currently, the Minnesota State Patrol is not reporting any major crashes.
The Source: FOX 9 Meteorologist Ian Leonard has the latest weather updates, and road conditions are available from the Minnesota Department of Transportation.
Minnesota
The Indian Child Welfare Act is before the Minnesota Supreme Court again. Here’s why

Two Martin County foster parents are getting another audience in front of the Minnesota Supreme Court Tuesday, after arguing last fall that a nearly 50-year-old law that prevented them from adopting two Native children is unconstitutional.
If the couple succeeds in their challenge, it could drastically alter the constitutionality of the law, which is meant to preserve tribal sovereignty and address decades of Native children being severed from their cultures.
The twins at the center of this case were initially placed with foster parents until a lower court ruled they should be placed with a relative. The white foster couple, Kellie and Nathan Reyelts of Fairmont, wanted to adopt the children and claim they’ve been prevented from doing so because of the Indian Child Welfare Act, or ICWA, and a state companion law known as the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act, or MIFPA. They say the law is unfair.
The couple says the placement preferences required under the two laws — that the children be placed with an immediate family member or a foster home approved by the tribe — violate their 5th and 14th Amendment rights.
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The twins were removed from the Reyelts’ home after the Red Lake Nation, the tribal nation their mother is from and which they are eligible to become citizens of, said they should be placed with an aunt. The twins are now living with their grandmother and have been since September of 2023. An older sibling also resides with them.
Two lower courts already ruled against the Reyelts’ claims that the two laws discriminate against them in the adoption process because of their race.
Last fall, they took their case to the Minnesota Supreme Court. Before the court ruled, they asked for a second hearing — Tuesday’s — to make the same constitutional claims and add two more issues: Did the district court err in denying their motion for permissive intervention, and did the district court err in dismissing their third party custody petition?
The constitutional issue being considered again: Are the placement preferences of ICWA and MIFPA unconstitutional? The placement preference is with an immediate family member or a placement preference chosen by the Red Lake Nation.
Joseph Plumer, the attorney for the Red Lake Nation, said the reason the plaintiff’s attorneys are bringing this case is simple — they want to bring this case before the United States Supreme Court.
During last fall’s oral arguments, Associate Justice Anne McKeig, herself a descendant of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe, directly asked Plumer if he thought it was their intention.
“Counsel, can I ask you a question that’s probably going to be controversial, but I’m going to ask it anyway. Does there seem to be some — gamesmanship may not be the right word — but do you see this court as an avenue to try to get the issue of constitutionality of the Indian Child Welfare Act before the United States Supreme Court?” McKeig asked.
“Yes,” Plumer responded. “That’s exactly what the appellants are trying to do in this case.”
Shannon Smith, the executive director of the ICWA Law Center, which provides legal services and advocacy to Native families impacted by the child protection system, agrees.
“They are looking, I think, for something that somehow can be distinguishable from the decision in Haaland v. Brackeen,” Smith said.
She is referring to the case involving a white Texas couple who had successfully adopted a Navajo child. Their attorneys, including Mark Fiddler, a citizen of the Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe and the attorney representing the Reyelts, argued the laws were race-based and unconstitutional. Even though they lost the case, the court found that the petitioners’ claims of equal protection lacked standing, which is why the Reyelts can challenge the placement and claim discrimination.
Fiddler declined to comment to MPR News.
Smith says foster parents are an important part of the system of keeping children safe and providing stability. But, their role is temporary.
“You’re temporarily stepping in to care for a child where the intent is for the child to be reunified with a parent or place the relative,” she said.
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