Wisconsin
Holiday Train returns, making stops in south central Wisconsin
MADISON, Wis. (WMTV) – The CPKC Holiday Train runs from Nov. 21 to Dec. 20, spreading joy and music while also raising awareness and money for local food pantries. On Monday, the train made stops in Portage, Wisconsin Dells, Mauston, Tomah, Sparta and La Crosse.
The train is decked out with holiday lights and hosts concerts while it is stopped in each town. On Monday, artists The Lone Bellow and Tiera Kennedy performed on the train.
“It’s all about community, and everyone should have a wonderful Christmas,” said Michelle Laufenberg, who attended the Portage stop.
The event also helps raise money, food, and awareness for food insecurity and supports local food pantries.
“So the food donation is important for the struggling families in the community, so that they can feel free to go and get help anytime they need, without any questions,” explained Karen Krejchik, who also attended the Portage stop.
Families had fun dancing to the music, donating to their local food pantries and enjoying the community.
“It’s a great cause for all of Portage and all of Wisconsin and all the other states the train goes through,” said Laufenberg.
The holiday train will continue traveling across the nation until December 20th, continuing to raise awareness and support for food banks across the nation. Next, the train will travel through and make many stops in Minnesota.
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Wisconsin
The Huge New American Olympic Star No One Saw Coming
This is part of Slate’s 2026 Olympics coverage. Read more here.
On Wednesday at the Milan Cortina Games, America’s long national speedskating nightmare finally came to an end. With an exhilarating come-from-behind sprint in the last lap of the 1,000-meter race, 21-year-old Wisconsinite Jordan Stolz passed Dutch superstar Jenning de Boo to set a new Olympic record and win gold to boot. Before Wednesday, Team USA hadn’t won an individual men’s long-track speedskating Olympic medal in 16 years. Stolz’s gold doesn’t just mark the end of a long fallow period in a sport at which America once excelled. It could also herald the beginning of a new golden age.
For decades, American long-track and short-track speedskaters were an international force, with athletes such as Bonnie Blair, Dan Jansen, Shani Davis, and Apolo Anton Ohno racking up Olympic titles. You probably still recognize these names, which speaks to the outsized cachet that speedskating long enjoyed in the United States. Despite the sport’s relative obscurity, America’s top speedskaters have often become crossover celebrities.
Twelve years ago, this stretch of dominance came to an abrupt end. Team USA failed to win a single long-track medal at either the 2014 Sochi Games or the 2018 Pyeongchang Games, and won only a single short-track medal at each. The Americans did a little better in 2022—Erin Jackson won gold in the 500 meters, and the men won a bronze in the team sprint—but got no medals at all in short track. Theories varied as to why American speedskating took such a nosedive. Some blamed substandard racing suits. Others blamed US Speedskating leadership. Still others blamed the very mean short-track coach who’d been hired to shape up Team USA.
Maybe the real reason was that Team USA was waiting for Jordan Stolz to reach his prime. As a kid, Stolz idolized Ohno and emulated him throughout long Wisconsin winters spent skating on his backyard pond. When Stolz outgrew his backyard, his parents took him to one of the closest indoor rinks they could find—the Pettit National Ice Center, in Milwaukee, which just so happens to be the best speedskating training center in the country. There, Stolz worked with a succession of top coaches—including, briefly, Shani Davis—to develop his training routine and skating style.
Stolz’s development skyrocketed when he started working with Bob Corby, a former U.S. speedskater who had coached the 1984 Winter Olympics squad that left Sarajevo empty-handed. The medal shutout gnawed at Corby for years. “I was incredibly frustrated,” he said in a 2024 interview. “I asked myself: what did you do wrong? I thought a lot about it and said to myself: if I ever do this again, [I’d] do it differently.”
More than 30 years later, long after Corby had forsaken speedskating for a career in physical therapy, Stolz called out of the blue and asked to work with him. (“How can you say no to a 14-year-old kid who calls you on the phone?” Corby remembered.) Corby’s long layoff from the sport gave him a different perspective from many other top skating coaches. While contemporary trends in speedskating development tend to focus on data and analytics, Corby chose to emphasize Stolz’s strength and conditioning. “He likes work,” Corby said. “I pushed him on almost everything, and he just responded.”
This old-school focus made sense for Stolz, who seems to have a preternatural feel for speedskating technique. He excels at timing and turn mechanics, while minimizing “wasted motion” as well as any skater alive. “The things that he does well typically take people an entire career of microadjustments to get there,” 2006 Olympic gold medalist Joey Cheek told NPR in 2023. Gold medalist Dan Jansen concurred: “Jordan’s just a freak. You don’t learn to be as good technically as he is at 18 years old. You have to just feel it.”
Stolz clearly “feels it” while on the ice, which is perhaps one reason why a data-centric training regimen wasn’t for him. Rather than let the analytics tell him how to eke out incremental improvements, Stolz leans into what he already does well, while counting on Corby to push his body hard enough during training so that he can power through the final lap on race day.
This strategy paid off for Stolz on Wednesday. In many of the preceding heats, I watched as skaters took early leads only to run out of gas. Stolz, too, took an early lead against de Boo—but the Dutchman eventually passed him and led going into the final lap. Then, in the final turn, Stolz made his move, passing de Boo on the inside and surging across the finish line and into the Olympic record book.
Stolz has three races left to skate in Milan Cortina—and after Wednesday’s dominant performance, he’ll be marked as the man to beat in the 500-meter and 1,500-meter events and as a contender in the mass start.
If you think the pressure will rattle him, then you don’t know Jordan Stolz. “I like the feeling of being the hunted one,” he told CBC Sports last year. At long last, the rest of the world is chasing an American speedskater—and at these Olympics, Stolz might never get caught.
Additional reporting by Rosemary Belson.
Wisconsin
These 14 cities are the best places to live in Wisconsin, report says
Check out the frozen Lake Michigan lakefront in Milwaukee from a drone
The recent deep freeze has left the shoreline and banks of Lake Michigan around Milwaukee beautifully frozen in a picturesque display.
What makes a good place to live?
Maybe it’s affordable housing and a strong local economy, or access to quality schools and health care, or even healthy air quality and a low chance of extreme weather.
These were all among the metrics U.S. News & World Report measured in its latest ranking of the best places to live in the United States. Of the 250 cities named in the list, 14 in Wisconsin made the cut.
U.S. News & World Report named Eau Claire the top Wisconsin city to live in and the 49th-best city overall. Appleton wasn’t far behind, ranking as the 53rd-best place nationwide. Milwaukee, meanwhile, placed at the bottom of the list of Wisconsin cities.
Here’s what else to know about the rankings:
Here are the best places to live in Wisconsin, according to U.S. News & World Report
These 14 cities are the best places to live in Wisconsin, according to U.S. News & World Report:
- Eau Claire
- Appleton
- Waukesha
- Oshkosh
- Wausau
- Green Bay
- Sheboygan
- Janesville
- Kenosha
- La Crosse
- Madison
- Fond du Lac
- Racine
- Milwaukee
What makes Eau Claire one of the best places to live?
Eau Claire’s low cost of living and its strong job market earned it the top spot among Wisconsin cities.
The median home value in Eau Claire is $260,971, compared to the national average of $370,489, according to the study. Most data in the report was from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.
As of 2023, the city’s unemployment rate of 3.6% was nearly a full percentage point below the national rate. Eau Claire’s job market index – based on local unemployment and average household income – was also better than other similarly sized metro areas, the report said.
As for Eau Claire’s population, the report found residents’ ages were fairly evenly distributed across age groups. The under-20 group made up the largest proportion of the population, accounting for 23% of the approximately 72,000 residents.
The average commute time in Eau Claire is just over 13 minutes, or eight minutes lower than the national average, the study found. Nearly 84% of Eau Claire commuters drive to work, and under 5% walk, ride a bike or use public transportation.
What did the report have to say about Milwaukee?
Milwaukee residents may take issue with the city’s placement on the list, but U.S. News & World Report still ranked it among the best places to live nationally.
Like Eau Claire, the report found Milwaukee offers a lower cost of living than most similarly sized cities. The city’s median home value is $197,153, and its median household income is $53,370. Median rent is $900.
Milwaukee’s population skews younger, with under-20 residents making up 28% of the population; 20- to 24-year-olds making up 8%; 25- to 34-year-olds making up 17%; 45- to 64-year-olds making up 21%; and residents over 65 making up 12%.
The city’s median age is 31.7, and just over 26% of residents are married, the report said.
10 best places to live in the US, according to U.S. News & World Report
U.S. News & World Report ranked these 10 cities as the best places to live in the country:
- Johns Creek, Georgia
- Carmel, Indiana
- Pearland, Texas
- Fishers, Indiana
- Cary, North Carolina
- League City, Texas
- Apex, North Carolina
- Leander, Texas
- Rochester Hills, Michigan
- Troy, Michigan
Wisconsin
Wisconsin weather: Tornado alley expands impacting Badger State
Annual probability of a tornado from 1994-2024. 30-year climate data.
MILWAUKEE – Tornado Alley has been expanding eastward as climate data shows the increased activity in tornadoes, damaging winds, and hail events.
The National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) and Storm Prediction Center (SPC) released the probability of these events occurring within 25 miles of any location based on historical data.
Changes in Tornado Alley
What we know:
Annual probability of a tornado from 1955-2024. 70-year climate data.
Tornado Alley was originally known as a concentrated area across the Great Plains including parts of the Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. New tornado data shows that a much larger portion of the United States is now included in tornado alley compared to before. Higher probability areas show where tornadoes have been more consistent over time.
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It is fair to say that tornado alley is expanded eastward based on climate data. Darker areas on the maps above show where there is more likelihood for tornadoes to occur, but the darker color has shifted. New locations include central and eastern portions of the United States, with some of the higher probability areas including the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys.
What does this mean for Wisconsin?
By the numbers:
Over a 30-year climate period, data shows a 70% to 80% probability of any tornado in Wisconsin has shifted slightly southwest. However, over the past frequency of weaker tornadoes has slightly increased.
The chance for severe winds (60mph or greater) has moderately increased, with 70% to 80% probability in southwestern Wisconsin, and 50% to 60% probability in southeastern Wisconsin. The chance for hail greater than or equal to half an inch has significantly increased 80% to 90%.
Each severe weather season is different based on a variety of factors. However, climatology data helps meteorologists recognize patterns to adapt, understand, and prepare for severe weather events.
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The overall trend will be more frequent storm system that can bring southern Wisconsin more frequent but weaker tornadoes, hail, and damaging wind events. Keep in mind that severe weather can happen at any time of the year—even the winter months.
The Source: The information provided in this story is from the National Centers for Environmental Information, Storm Prediction Center, and FOX6 Weather Experts.
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