Wisconsin
Winter weather advisory issued for southeast Wisconsin
MILWAUKEE – The National Weather Service has issued a winter weather advisory from 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9 through 6 a.m. Monday, Nov. 10.
This is for Milwaukee, Racine, and Kenosha counties, where heavy lake effect snow can produce 2″ to 5″ of snow with locally higher amounts possible if the snow band(s) persist longer and/or produce heavier rates of snowfall during this time.
Heavier amounts of snow and higher impacts continue from Lake County in Illinois through Chicago, Valparaiso, and South Haven. Northerly winds are moving very cold air over the warmer waters of Lake Michigan, creating concentrated bands of heavy snow.
Depending on the orientation of the winds, this can move the lake effect snow bands into various areas in Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan.
Trends are continuing to favor an intense band that can bring heavy snowfall to some lakeshore areas. There will be a sharp cutoff gradient of heavy snow to light snow, all depending on where the snow band sets up.
There is a slight chance that the lake effect snow could stay more over the lake if the winds stay more out of the north. That would cut down on the amount of snow that southeast Wisconsin can see. However, most models are trending at pushing the band into Milwaukee, Racine, and Kenosha counties, causing snow to accumulate 2″ to 5″.
Snow is going to move in during the evening hours when most people will be at home and sleeping, but due to the cold temperatures of the air and ground, snow will likely cause travel impacts Monday morning. It is not recommended to drive in lake effect snow due to the intense low visibility that can occur.
Plan for extra travel time tonight and into Monday morning as snow will likely stick on the pavement.
Your Fox6 Weather experts are watching this closely and will have you covered.
The Source: Information in this report is from the FOX6 Weather Experts and the National Weather Service.
Wisconsin
Dem leader Greta Neubauer backs redrawing Wisconsin congressional maps
Tony Evers signs Wisconsin legislative maps ending GOP gerrymander
Republicans in Wisconsin have enjoyed lopsided majorities in the Legislature under gerrymandered maps drawn in 2011.
MADISON – Assembly Minority Leader Greta Neubauer, D-Racine, said she supports redrawing Wisconsin’s congressional maps, a matter currently before the state Supreme Court.
Neubauer’s comments came the day after former Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, a Democratic candidate for governor, similarly signaled his support.
“I think that the current congressional maps are gerrymandered. Everyone knows that Wisconsin’s a purple state. It should be about 50-50. We’ve got six Republican congresspeople and two Democratic congresspeople,” Neubauer told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in an end-of-year interview covering a variety of topics. “So I think that these maps are not fair, and I do hope that they will consider whether new maps should be drawn.”
Last week, the state Supreme Court’s liberal majority appointed two three-judge panels to hear lawsuits from liberal groups challenging Wisconsin’s congressional lines before the 2026 elections.
President Donald Trump earlier this year pushed Republican-leaning states to redraw their congressional maps in order to add GOP-held seats in the U.S. House. The effort prompted some Democratic-leaning states to embark on their own efforts to add blue seats.
Wisconsin, where partisan control is divided between Democratic Gov. Tony Evers and a Republican-led Legislature, has not followed suit.
Evers, in a September interview with the Journal Sentinel, said it would be a mistake for Wisconsin to engage in the partisan arms race of attempting new congressional maps. Not only would it be “bad politics” for Democrats, he said at the time, he also didn’t think the party could pick up enough seats to make a difference.
The state’s current congressional lines were drawn by Evers. The state Supreme Court approved his set of maps in 2022 because it made the fewest changes compared to ones submitted by Republicans and others.
Conservative justices on the state’s high court strongly objected to the recent orders sending the lawsuits to three-judge panels, noting that the court has previously rejected challenges to Wisconsin’s congressional districts.
In its Nov. 25 orders, the liberal-led court concluded the two complaints constitute “an action to challenge the apportionment of any congressional or state legislative district” under a 2011 state law that requires such challenges to be heard by a panel appointed by the state’s high court.
Jessie Opoien can be reached at jessie.opoien@jrn.com.
Wisconsin
State grants awarded to 6 dairy companies in Northeast Wisconsin
(WLUK) — Several Northeast Wisconsin dairy companies have received new state funding, Gov. Tony Evers announced Thursday.
Dairy Processor Grants were awarded to 13 companies by the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection (DATCP). These grants are designed to help local dairy processors with projects that modernize and grow their businesses, produce new products or expand their markets, while also improving profitability. The goal is to sustain the long-term viability of Wisconsin’s dairy processing industry.
“We must be doing everything we can to ensure Wisconsin remains on top as America’s Dairyland,” said Evers, in part, in a news release.
I’m proud to have secured additional investments for this critical program in the most recent state budget I signed, and I’m glad to see these funds going out the door to ensure our dedicated dairy producers have the support and resources they need to compete and be successful.
A total of $600,000 was available for this year’s grants, with a maximum of $50,000 allowed for each company. Grant recipients are required to provide a match of at least 20% of the grant amount.
The selected winners in Northeast Wisconsin are:
- Briess in Chilton to invest in an upgrade of control systems
- Milk Specialties Company (Actus Nutrition) in Fond du Lac to investigate the potential of Milk Basic Proteins (MBP) as a value-added dairy ingredient
- Pine River Dairy in Manitowoc to modernize butter packaging equipment to increase production capacity, enhance product quality and expand market reach
- Pine River Pre-Pack in Newton (Manitowoc County) to install a natural gas line and replace the existing fuel oil-burning boiler and tank water heater at the processing facility
- Rosewood Dairy Inc. (Renard’s Cheese) in Sturgeon Bay to construct a stand-alone building to house several self-serve AI “smart coolers”
- Widmer’s Cheese Cellars in Theresa (Dodge County) to complete a new and improved milk intake design proposal
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Since 2014, DATCP has received 283 proposals for Dairy Processor Grant, requesting more than $12 million. 148 of those proposals were funded, totaling $3.8 million.
Wisconsin
Country Thunder Wisconsin 2026 books Riley Green, Shaboozey and more
Some of the best Milwaukee concerts and comedy shows this winter
Here are some top shows to check out in Milwaukee from December 2025 through February 2026.
Three rising country artists who delivered some of the buzziest shows in Milwaukee in 2025 have graduated to Country Thunder Wisconsin headliner status for 2026.
Gavin Adcock, the Red Clay Strays and Riley Green – and longtime country A-lister Keith Urban – will headline the Academy of Country Music Award-winning festival in Twin Lakes, Wisconsin, July 16 to 19, festival officials announced Dec. 4.
Adcock and Green both performed for some of the largest side-stage crowds at Summerfest in Milwaukee this year, while Red Clay Strays headlined a sold-out show at the BMO Pavilion in August.
The Country Thunder lineup also boasts the first Wisconsin performance from Shaboozey, whose blockbuster hit “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” was the most streamed song on Spotify in Milwaukee last year. Other confirmed acts include Gretchen Wilson, Ian Munsick, Nate Smith, George Birge, Mark Chesnutt, Dasha, Corey Kent and more.
Tickets and camping passes are available at countrythunder.com/wi-tickets, with weekend passes ranging from $320 for general admission to $790 for a “weekend platinum circle” experience.
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