Minnesota
University of Minnesota professor shares what’s at stake for local businesses amid trade talks

New tariff rates are set to go live next month, but the effects on Minnesota small business owners could be felt in a matter of days.
From Minnesota Ice and All Energy Solar in St. Paul to Healthy for Life Meals in New Hope, tariffs are the talk of the town.
WCCO spoke with Paul Vaaler, a trade law professor from the University of Minnesota, about tariffs.
“That’s the worst part, is the uncertainty that it creates,” Vaaler said.
He says if the 3-month tariff ban lifts later this week, things could change fast.
“For Minnesota businesses, we should care a lot about three things, three countries, Canada, Mexico and China, as they are three of the biggest sources so far.”
He’s particularly worried about imported metals and all the Canadian fuel for energy, which could mean big problems for small businesses.
“They don’t have the margins to eat that the stock, the credit line to hold them over,” Vaaler said.
He says the worst case is “bankruptcy,” and the best case “would be threats but not actual tariffs.”
Vaaler says the best way to gauge impacts on small businesses will be to monitor bankruptcy court.
He says the overall Minnesota economy is in better shape because of the number of Fortune 500 companies located in the state.

Minnesota
Will Minnesota get a colorful fall? U forestry specialist thinks so

Minnesota is eight days into meteorological fall, and it definitely felt like it over the weekend — though it doesn’t look like it yet.
The current fall colors map shows most of Minnesota and Wisconsin haven’t seen much color change yet. Only a slight color change has occurred northwest of St. Cloud and in Minnesota’s far northwestern corner.
Diminishing daylight leads to the fall color change, but there are weather impacts as well. Working in the state’s favor are the lack of extreme heat and drought conditions over the summer.
As long as there’s a balance of warm weather days and cool nights, a colorful fall is in the cards.
Eli Sagore is a forestry specialist with the University of Minnesota.
“It’s variable from place to place, even across Minnesota, which isn’t a huge area, but I think this is probably going to be a pretty good year for fall color,” Sagore said. “We had about average weather. Trees seem pretty happy. Everything seems to be growing pretty well this year in my yard and garden and across the woods as well. So my guess is that trees are in pretty good shape for the most part, across Minnesota, and that this is going to be a pretty good growing season … My guess is that this is going to be a pretty good fall foliage season.”
What we don’t want is a hard freeze, which will stop everything in its tracks and bring an abrupt end to the fall foliage show.
Minnesota
Souhan: Vikings must prove prove that they’re capable of even putting a scare into the NFL’s best teams in January

Vikings fans seem to be surfing a wave of optimism, buoyed by coach Kevin O’Connell’s quarterback whispering, a roster filled with quality players and the arrival of the most hope-inspiring figure in modern American sports — the first-round quarterback.
But can I inject a small dose of reality into your pregame cocktail?
Before the Vikings prove they can win big games, they might need to prove that they’re capable of losing big games.
Scratch a Vikings fan, or employee, and they’ll tell you how much they crave just one Super Bowl title. I’ve had longtime Vikings employees tell me they can die happy with just one, which they would view as much a salve to the great players who came before them as they would view it a personal accomplishment.
Here’s the dose of reality:
For all of this team’s promise, and despite winning 13 or more games in two of the last three regular seasons, this franchise has done almost nothing in the postseason for quite a while.
This franchise hasn’t won a playoff game since the 2019 season. The Vikings haven’t won a divisional-round playoff game since the 2017 season, and they needed a play that would become defined as a “miracle” to win that one.
They haven’t won a divisional-round playoff game without benefiting from a “miracle” play since the 2009 season.
Minnesota
Minnesota United Sells Oluwaseyi, Shows Need For MLS Calendar Switch

Tani Oluwaseyi #14 of Minnesota United points in the air after scoring at the Seattle Sounders during the second half at Lumen Field on June 01.
Getty Images
In the end, Minnesota United Sporting Director Khaled El-Ahmad had no good options as Villareal pursued Loons star striker Tani Oluwayesi.
He could either separate his squad from its most productive attcking player just in time for the MLS stretch run and next month’s U.S. Open Cup final. Or he could risk alienating the 25-year-old Oluwaseyi by denying a preciously rare chance to move from MLS directly to a Big Five European league, not to mention leaving a club record transfer fee of reportedly $8.5-$9 million on the table.
In the end, El-Ahmad did what was definitely in Oluwaseyi’s best long-term interest, and probably the club’s as well, officially sending the Canadian international on to an enticing new opportunity in a move announced Friday.
And in doing so, he also illustrated why so many clubs – even those who experience frigid winters like those in Minnesota – are coming around on a potential MLS calendar switch that feels like an eventuality more than a question.
Dollars Out Require Dollars In
With the close of the league’s incoming window earlier this month, MLS smashed its previous record for outlay on new players, with 30 clubs combining to spend roughly $336 million in deals during the league’s two 2025 windows.
But the long-term sustainability of such an approach depends on MLS also to increase its volume as a player exporter. And the only real way to continue that work is to be willing to sell when most clubs with money are doing most of their buying: the summer season that precedes the beginning of most European seasons.
Minnesota is far from the first MLS club to suffer from this misalignment. And in particular, teams with in-form strikers like Oluwaseyi have repeatedly found the terms of mid-season sales too good to refuse.
In 2022, the New England Revolution sold striker Adam Buksa to RC Lens in early June. Later that year, New York City FC loaned Valentin Castellanos to Girona for the start of their La Liga campaign.
Last summer, the Philadelphia Union sold Julian Carranza to Feynoord just hours before the calendar turned to July. Not long after Real Salt Lake sold Andres Gomez to Stade Rennais.
All four of those clubs made genuine attempts to reload before the year ended. Only 2022 NYCFC won a playoff match. Neither 2022 New England nor 2024 Philadelphia reached the postseason.
Weathering The Storm
Minnesota’s sale comes even later, meaning the Loons can no longer make incoming transfers and can only add to their rosters via free agent signings. That said, the club were clearly planning on this eventuality when they added forwards Mamadou Diengo from Hartford Athletic and Kenyel Michel from LD Alajuelense.
They were also one of the few MLS teams with two productive center forwards, and Kelvin Yeboah will now perhaps get more chances to add to his haul of nine goals and two assists. But there’s bound to be a drag on the Loons’ performances for the rest of the season with Oluwaseyi’s departure.
Switching the schedule will come with challenges. Playing through the coldest part of the winter in Minnesota is not only inadvisable, it’s more or less impossible, as an infamous World Cup qualifier between the United States and Honduras in early February of 2022 proved.
But the combination of a winter break, some additional scheduling imbalances to help the league’s coldest markets, and perhaps even the shifting of Leagues Cup on the annual schedule should make those challenges solvable.
In exchange, clubs like this year’s Loons or last year’s RSL wouldn’t have to face the prospect of sandbagging their season for a club-record payday nearly as often. Instead, they could do much of that business at the start of their own campaign, giving sporting directors, managers and even fans a lot more time to adjust to their side’s new reality.
If MLS is serious about becoming a league that rivals some of the world’s most famous, that change needs to come as soon as is reasonably possible.
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