Wisconsin
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg highlights Great Lakes ports in Wisconsin trip
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg explains Great Lakes ports value
Transportation Sec. Pete Buttigieg was in Manitowoc, Wis. to see Navy Cranes built at Konecranes to grains of barley made into malt at Briess Malt.
MANITOWOC – In the port cities that line Wisconsin’s eastern coast, access to Lake Michigan supports a broad swath of industries including cargo transportation, heavy machinery manufacturing, agricultural exports and the malt supply for some of Wisconsin’s iconic craft brewing operations.
In a recent visit to three of those ports, U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg was traveling in his official capacity, despite reports indicating he is likely in consideration as a potential running mate for Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris. Harris is expected to meet this weekend with several candidates as she takes the helm of the Democratic presidential ticket, following President Joe Biden’s withdrawal from the race late last month.
While Buttigieg — a former mayor of South Bend, Ind., and 2020 presidential candidate — adhered to the constraints of traveling as a representative of the federal government rather than a campaign, his message was clear: the investments he was highlighting exist in the context of an administration that enacted the $1.2 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, $17 billion of which was directed to ports and waterways.
“The last administration (under Republican former President Donald Trump) talked a good game about infrastructure but failed to get a package through,” Buttigieg told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel during a Tuesday stop at Briess Malt & Ingredients Co. “This is different. This is a season of infrastructure, not just a so-called Infrastructure Week, which was getting to be a bit of a joke in Washington in the last administration. This is an infrastructure decade, and we’re in the middle of it.”
The $1.2 trillion package, which Biden signed into law in 2021, addresses nearly every facet of American infrastructure, including public transportation, roads, bridges, ports, railways, power grids, broadband internet, as well as water and sewage systems. It marked the largest investment in the country’s infrastructure in decades and, Buttigieg said, will make streets safer, improve the climate and save lives.
“Everything about this excites me. And it’s just so powerful to look at the difference between talking and doing,” he said.
Buttigieg had made his way down to Manitowoc from Menominee, Mich., and visited Milwaukee the following day.
The Menominee Harbor port received $21 million in federal funding in June to reconstruct deteriorating port infrastructure and boost rail capacity.
In Manitowoc, Buttigieg toured Broadwind Heavy Fabrications, which processes more than 100,000 tons of steel each year, enabling the production of a variety of components and machinery including large cranes used by the U.S. Navy, mining equipment and wind turbines.
He then visited Briess, a family-owned business of more than 100 years that produces malts, or malted barley, used by breweries including New Glarus, Central Waters, Great Dane and Milwaukee Brewing Company.
“Our real goal here is to look at another side of America’s supply chains. Container shipping at the coast is important, but that’s only part of the story. Another very important part of the story is our Great Lakes ports, and the economy that connects into them,” Buttigieg said.
In the Marinette, Wisconsin and Menominee, Michigan area, Buttigieg said, he saw how much the port has grown and noted the influence of the wind industry and pulp movement on the supply chain and the creation of good-paying jobs.
“Here (in Manitowoc), we saw these enormous, colossal cranes that are such an important part of America’s defense system, and the range of products from that, to the barley that we’re looking at as part of this malting process, that they’re all only possible because of goods movement,” he told the Journal Sentinel. “And that’s why we’re investing in the ports as well as the railroad improvements, the roads and bridges and highways and everything else. That’s part of the Biden-Harris infrastructure package.”
Asked what, as transportation secretary, he would like to see from Congress to further support infrastructure funding, Buttigieg noted the government is “smack in the middle of the life of this five year bill, (so) we’re already starting to talk about what will happen in 2026.”
“We need sustained support for meaningful infrastructure investments,” he said. “Some of these, including the port infrastructure development programs, are funded with year-to-year appropriations. So it’s not just the Biden-Harris infrastructure package; we need support every single year to keep these programs going, to make investments like the ones we’re making in Wisconsin.”
Buttigieg said it’s also important for lawmakers to stay engaged with the federal government to ensure local projects are receiving the support they need.
“This is something that we talk to (Wisconsin Democratic Sen.) Tammy Baldwin a lot about,” he said. “She was there for us when we were trying to get the (infrastructure) bill passed. She’s also very focused on things like ‘made in America’ and project delivery that are going to help make sure the projects are successful.”
As Harris and Trump face off for the presidency, Baldwin faces a challenge from Republican businessman Eric Hovde as she seeks a third Senate term.
In a call with reporters ahead of his Wisconsin visits, state Republican officials called Buttigieg’s events a “taxpayer-funded trip for the secretary to come out and audition for vice president.”
“What he’s not going to do is talk to voters, show up at a grocery store checkout counter and understand the frustration that people have with the Biden-Harris administration,” U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil said.
Asked about federal grants for infrastructure that Buttigieg is highlighting in Wisconsin, Steil said “logical investments in our state infrastructure is a positive thing.”
“(The) concern that all of us have with the Biden-Harris administration is the overall amount of reckless spending,” he said. “When you see the secretary come in, he’s going to cherry-pick key investments. What he’s not going to do is highlight the number of flawed investments that his administration is trying to shove through, in particular electric vehicle charging stations, the inability of the FAA to operate efficiently.”
Republican Party of Wisconsin Chairman Brian Schimming referred to Buttigieg’s visit as “the Democrat vice presidential Olympics” making an appearance in Wisconsin.
Asked what kind of role he’d like to hold in a potential Harris administration, Buttigieg said, “All I’ll say is I’m proud to be doing the work that I’m doing.”
Buttigieg said he’s honored the Biden-Harris administration trusted him with the opportunity “because there’s never been a more dynamic or exciting time to be the Secretary of Transportation.”
Hope Karnopp of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel contributed.
Jessie Opoien can be reached at jessie.opoien@jrn.com.
Wisconsin
Mimi Colyer, Grace Egan among Wisconsin volleyball’s standouts in sweep over Ohio State
Ohio State transfer Grace Egan hits .667 in return to Columbus
Wisconsin coach Kelly Sheffield comments on getting swept by Nebraska
Wisconsin volleyball became the 12th consecutive team to be swept by top-ranked Nebraska. Here’s what Kelly Sheffield said after the loss.
Two days after getting dominated by the best team in the Big Ten, No. 11 Wisconsin volleyball was on the more enjoyable side of a rout against the worst team in the Big Ten.
The Badgers eased past Ohio State in three sets, 25-14, 25-12, 25-14, while hitting above .400 for the first time against a Big Ten foe this season on Sunday, Nov. 2 in Columbus, Ohio.
Wisconsin is now 9-3 in Big Ten play while Ohio State is 0-12. Here are three takeaways from the match:
Mimi Colyer has dominant start
UW coach Kelly Sheffield, with star outside hitter (and postseason award candidate) Mimi Colyer two seats away, said that Nebraska’s Bergen Reilly is “probably the best player in the conference” after the Huskers’ sweep over the Badgers.
Colyer responded two days later with a dominant performance in the Badgers’ next match.
Wisconsin’s first four points were on Colyer’s four kills. Her first eight attempted attacks all ended in kills, and her first attack error did not come until early in the second set. Her ninth kill prompted a “goodness gracious” from the Big Ten Network play-by-play commentator.
As usual, Colyer was a threat in both the front and back rows. She had other attacks that put Ohio State in challenging positions, such as when her attack led to an Ohio State overpass and a joust won by UW teammate Carter Booth in the second set.
Colyer finished the match with 17 kills while hitting .441. She has recorded 10-plus kills in all but one match this season and now is averaging 5.2 kills per set, which trails only Penn State’s Kennedy Martin in the Big Ten.
Grace Egan stands out in multiple ways in her homecoming
Ohio State transfer Grace Egan expressed excitement during a media availability last week to be playing at a “home away from home” for the Badgers’ Nov. 2 match at Ohio State.
She played like she was at a home away from home, too, recording seven kills at an exceptionally efficient .667 clip. She also had two service aces, which were tied for the team lead, and was second on the team with eight digs.
Colyer and Egan were two of the five Badgers who finished the match with a hitting percentage above .400. The others were Carter Booth at .500, Una Vajagic at .444 and Addy Horner at .667.
Badgers thrive again on defense
One match after allowing a season-high .349 hitting percentage against No. 1 Nebraska, Wisconsin’s defense looked the part in its win over Ohio State.
The Badgers held Ohio State to a .078 hitting percentage in the uneventful three-set sweep. The Buckeyes became UW’s seventh opponent to hit below .100, joining Marquette, Rutgers, Iowa, then-No. 23 UCLA, UW-Milwaukee and Chicago State.
Wisconsin “set the tone defensively,” Sheffield said in the postgame radio interview.
“Our backcourt was flying around without hesitation,” Sheffield said. “And it starts with that. I think sometimes when you’re overthinking, you can start hesitating. … I thought we were settled and reading the game and then pursuing aggressively.”
Wisconsin
Badgers dominate NDSU in season opener | Wisconsin Badgers
Freshman Wyatt Ingham, in his collegiate debut, kicked off the action with the Badgers’ first individual victory of the year at 19-4.
No. 17 Braxton Amos followed it up with a pin in the heavyweight section.
No. 9 Nicolar Rivera earned a win by major decision at 14-6 in 125.
In 133, No. 4 Zan Fugitt tallied a victory via a 4-3 decision.
No. 15 Joseph Zargo burst onto the scene with a 17-1 victory in the 149 weight class.
Redshirt senior Luke Mechler battled in extra time to secure three more points for Wisconsin in 157.
Redshirt sophomore Julian George came out aggressively in his dual, earning an 8-2 win in the 165 weight class.
Redshirt sophomore Luke Condon racked up a major decision in 174 with a 13-4 win.
To wrap up the standouts, redshirt senior Cale Anderson provided a comeback victory with a 13-9 decision.
Looking Ahead
The Badgers are back in action on Saturday, Nov. 8, when they hit the road to Iowa State to compete in the Iowa State Invite.
Wisconsin Results:
Wisconsin 36, North Dakota State 3
125 – No. 9 Nicolar Rivera (Wisconsin) over Ezekiel Witt (NDSU), Major Dec. 14-6
133 – No. 4 Zan Fugitt (Wisconsin) over Tristan Daugherty (NDSU), Dec. 3-0
141 – Michael Olson (NDSU) over Carson Exferd (Wisconsin), Dec. 3-0
149 – No. 15 Joseph Zargo (Wisconsin) over Brayden Canoyer, TF 17-1 (5:40)
157 – Luke Mechler (Wisconsin) over Gavin Drexler (NDSU), SV-1 4-1
165 – Julian George (Wisconsin) over Tyler Secoy (NDSU), Dec. 8-2
174 – No. 27 Luke Condon (Wisconsin) over Max Magayna (NDSU), Major Dec. 13-4
184 – Cale Anderson (Wisconsin) over Aidan Bernot (NDSU), Dec. 13-9
197 – Wyatt Ingham (Wisconsin) over Devin Wasley (NDSU), TF 19-4 (4:05)
285 – No. 17 Braxton Amos (Wisconsin) over Drew Blackburn-Forst (NDSU), F (6:20)
Wisconsin
How did Wisconsin basketball transfers perform in win over UW-Platteville?
Wisconsin basketball secured a 69-53 exhibition victory over UW-Platteville on Wednesday.
Despite holding a 45-41 advantage with just 10 minutes remaining in the bout, Wisconsin received ample offensive contributions from its class of 2025 transfer cohort in the 16-point victory.
Veteran guard Nick Boyd, who joined the program from San Diego State, finished the contest with 11 points, three rebounds and one assist in 24 minutes of action. His layup with roughly five minutes to spare ballooned UW’s edge to 14, 59-45, essentially icing the game.
Forward Austin Rapp, who played for the Portland Pilots a season ago, tallied 14 points, seven rebounds, two assists and two steals in 27 minutes alongside center Nolan Winter, who led the team with 17 points, 15 rebounds and three dimes. Rapp did miss seven 3-pointers and turned the ball over seven times, but he showcased his offensive aggressiveness with a team-high 12 field goal attempts.
Virginia transfer Andrew Rhode notched seven points, three rebounds, two assists and two steals in over 21 minutes of play, including five points within two minutes in the second half. Rhode also scored five points and was active with three steals in Wisconsin’s exhibition against Oklahoma on Oct. 24.
All three playmakers figure to contribute in a large capacity for Wisconsin throughout the regular season alongside both Winter and star guard John Blackwell. Gard’s unit opens the regular season on Nov. 3 against Campbell at the Kohl Center, with tipoff set for 7:00 p.m CT.
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