Signage mounted on new Pride of Lewiston

Construction update. The steel walls in currently stylish gray are in place on the new $3.4 million Lewiston home for home for fire, police and ambulance services. Off U.S. Highway 14. Image: Steve Lunde
Earlier: Aiming skyward: Lewiston firehall takes form
Collision: Car and pedestrian on foot scooter
WINONA, Minn. —A Winona woman on a motorized foot scooter was injured in a Mankato Avenue roundabout when she and a car collided. Ariel Chelsea Alaspa, age 21, was taken to the Winona hospital, a couple blocks away, to be checked over. Her injuries appeared sustainable, deputies said. The accident was about 9:30 a.m. Alaspa was heading east off Sarnia Street. The driver of the car, Lance Jacob Glover, 30, of Winona, was unhurt. The airbag of his 2019 Nissan Rogue did not deploy. He had entered roundabout headed toward the Sugar Loaf. landmark.
Army Corps fleet flies birthday banners

On the Mississippi. A 250th greeting posted from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers with the Stars and Stripes in full furl. Not to go unnoticed: The Corps’ own flags with their red turret logo. Image: Melanie Peterson
Flooded outdoor venues declared unsafe
CALEDONIA, Minn. — Mud slides, washed-out trails and slipperiness have forced the weekend closure of outdoor venues across flood-stricken southern Minnesota. Among closures ordered by the state Natural Resources Department:
> Beaver Creek Valley State Park near Caledonia.
> Mystery Cave State Park and Forestville near Preston.
> Root River State Trail and the Chatfield Trail, Snake Creek Trail and the Southeast Minnesota Trail in Richard J. Dorer Memorial Hardwood State Forest.
Many campgrounds also are closed.
Alfresco eatery sold in Fountain City
FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. — The riverside Lily Pad restaurant in Fountain City, which features open-air seating above the river, has been sold. Owners Ross Patzner and Sarah Hemke confirmed the sale but didn’t disclose terms of the sale. Nor did they identify the buyer. Meanwhile, Patzner and Sarah Hemke still have their Golden Frog bar and grill for sale across the street.
Grants fund Southeast campus food pantries
WINONA, Minn. — Minnesota State College Southeast has received two grants for its nutritional support for students.
> Taylor Family Foundation, $17,000, to re-open its virtual food pantry for students taking online classes and don’t easy access to on-campus food pantries on the Winona or Red Wing campuses.
> Foundation for Essential Needs, $5,000, toward a new freezer to store more frozen food.
Tracy Rahim, student affairs coordinator, said campus pantries served 250 students this past spring. Southeast’s enrolment: 3,100. Rahim noted a Temple study that found that 41% of college students nationwide and 39% at Southeast experience food insecurity for want of money and skip meals or eat light.
WSU loses food-delivery robots
WINONA, Minn. — The last food-delivery robot at Winona State University has left the station. George Micalone, who oversees campus food services, confirmed that Starships Technologies of San Francisco has packed up its Winona robot to refurbish for deployment elsewhere. Micalone said campus caterer Chartwells is exploring other ways to deliver take-out meals from its Panda Express and Starbucks shops to dorms and around the neighborhood.
Verbatim
Starship: “We’ve made the decision to wind down all U.S. campus operations as we shift our strategic focus to retail grocery chains and hot food delivery in cities across Europe and the United States. Grocery delivery is on a 10-times growth trajectory for us over the next two years. In Finland alone, roughly one in five grocery deliveries is already completed by a Starship robot.”
Earlier: Campus food robots to new duty
Parachute device not activated in fatal crash
WINONA, Minn. — The ultra-light airplane that crashed and killed the pilot at the Winona airport last week had a parachute system that didn’t activateate, investigators said. Police ,who were first to arrive at the crash, recognized the ballistic parachute system mounted on the lower aft section. A Fire Department team was called to determine if the system was armed. The manufacturer then was called and advised that the system could be rendered safe by cutting the activation pull cord. Rather than risk an explosion, however, the firefighters called a state bomb squad to disarm the device.
Earlier: Cause of fatal Winona plane crash still unknown
Earlier: R.I.P.: Wayne Ledebuhr
18,000 gallons of Viroqua sewage into Kickapoo
VIROQUA, Wis. — Because heavy rains threatened to swell the municipal wastewater system beyond capacity, the city released 18,000 gallons of sewage into a tributary of the Kickapoo River. There was no choice, ghe city said: Otherwise sewers would back up into homes and businesses. The Kickapoo empties into the Wisconsin. River, then the Mississippi at Prairie du Chien. In an unsigned message to the public, je city said there there was no choice. The message noted that contaminants would be diluted by heavy runoffs in the Kickapoo watershed. Viroqua itself received sjx inches of rain the night July i. The question being asked around Viroqua, population 4,500 — and also downriver — was why city leaders have dallied in updating the city’s water management system.
Albino crab spider probably hungry

On a spent geranium blossom. Smaller than a thumbnail, green crab spiders feed on bugs. They bite and suck thm dry. Females can switch colors, sometimes even to white. They are venomous but the poison is too weak to affect humans. They are common in summer, although a full albino is not often seen. Image: Andy Frank

Another view. Why called crab spdiers? Like ocean crabs, they can scamper sideways. But very fast.
No storm injuries; trees down, limbs ripped off
WINONA, Minn. — Overnight storms took down a few trees and tore off lot of limbs around Winona but blocked n ostreets nor caused any injuries. In the county: Up East Burns Valley one tree blocked County Road 15. There was also a tree down on U.S. Highway 14 near St. Charles.
Storm saturates Farmers Park, downs trees

Not a welcoming moment. A giant tree, uprooted by winds from soggy soil, blocks the entrance to Winona County’s premier park at the confluence of Garvin Brook and Peterson Creek. Crews later sawed the tree for hauling away. Winds also toppled a second tree in park. A few miles away near the Winona Sportsman’s Club a downed tree blocked Garvin Ridge Road. Image: Steve Lunde
High water blocks I-90 west of Rochester
DEXTER, Minn. — Flooding forced the closure of 3-1/2 miles of transcontinental Interstate 90 between Rochester and Austin. The flooding was between the Dexter and Elkton interchanges. This is mostly flatland where I-90 was engineered above the terrain.
Emergency, fire crews make 73 calls
WINONA, Minn. – The Fire Department reported 54 emergency medical calls plus 19 fire calls in recent days:
> Tuesday, Mune 30: 15 medical calls plus 4 fire call.
> Monday, June 29: 2 medical calls plus 5 fire calls.
> Sunday, June 28: 5 medical calls plus 3 fire calls.
> Saturday, June 27: 8 medical calls plus no fire call.
> Friday, June 26: 12 medical calls plus 2 fire calls.
> Thursday, June 25: 6 medical calls plus 1 fire call.
> Wednesday, June 24: 9 medical calls plus 4 fire calls.
Earlier: Emergency, fire crews make 38 calls
Garvin Brook runs turgid, high, muddy

Low-level flooding. Torrential rains swelled Winona County creeks, including usually tranquil Garvin Brook out of Farmers Park upstream from Stockton. In places the creek-side golden rod, six feet highand in full July bloom, was mowed flat by the fast and swollen un-off. Image: Steve Lunde
Earlier: Flash floods possible around Winona
Hotel evacuated as fire burns on roof
ONALASKA, Wis. — An early morning fire on the roof of the Baymont Hotel in this La Crosse suburb forced guests into the street. The evacuation was orderly with no injuries. The Wyndom hotel chain which does bookings at its Baymont-branded hotels, didn’t respond to news inquiries about how many guests were staying at the hotel. Fire Chief Jeremy Southworth said the dislocated guests were shuttled to another hotel. The Onalaska Baymont, built in 1999, has rooms in the $120 range. The cause of fire was not known immediately. Lightning from severe thunderstorms had been in the area. Fire Chief Southworth said he called firefighters off the roof because of renewed lightning in the area. They focused on extinguish the fire from the inside. The fire broke about 3:30 a.m. Not until 5:15 was it out.

Baymont. Off Interstate 90 at 3300 Kinney Coulee Road.
No room at the inn. Guests book stays at Baymont hotels through the parent Wyndom chain. Wydnom has failed to ackowlwdge there was a fire. The Wyndom booking site the says reservations are not available because the hotel is fully occupied, which is a lie.
News summary at mid-week: July 1, 2026
GOVERNANCE: Ellison at helm in curbing Trump racism
GOVERNANCE: Pool open: Dippers, waders, swimmers rejoice
GOVERNANCE: Court: No prison porn for Iowa inmates
RIVER: Boater flees burning vessel off Latsch Island
POLICING: Winona sheriff backs Hazelton as successor
POLICING: Lewiston police officer moves to chief
POLITICS: Lindell claims victory in libel settlement
AVIATION: Cause of fatal Winona plane crash still unknown
REMEMBRANCE: R.I.P.: Wayne Ledebuhr
CRIME: He had stab wound; she said “accidental”
CRIME: Murder threat reported in child custody mix-up
CRIME: She showed bruises to cops; he denied assault
CRIME: Motorist charged for illicit pain-killer, marijuana
CRIME: Homeless man linked to collegian’s break-in
CRIME: Riotous yeggs disrupt suburban fireworks show
COLLEGES: Campus food robots to new duty
OUTDOORS: Thistles of the softest lavender
Cause of fatal Winona plane crash still unknown
WINONA, Minn. — A National Transportation Safety Board worksheet on a fatal crash at the Winona shows that the pilot, Wayne Ledebuhr, was landing after a 32-mile flight upriver from LaCrosse. The Board investigator who visited he site, said a fuller report will be completed in 30 days . At this point, according to the investigator’s worksheet, the crash was “under unknown circumstances.” The plane, an Airborne Windsports Edge numbered XT-912-, was destroyed. It was categorized as a weight-shift-control aircraft.”
Earlier: R.I.P.: Wayne Ledebuhr
Winona sheriff backs Hazelton as successor
WINONA Minn — Winona County Sheriff Ron Ganrude announced his support for John Hazelton to succeed him as sheriff. Ganrude, who is retiring, cited Hazelton for “leadership, integrity, and deep commitment to public safety.” Hazelton, age 48, has been in law enforcement 25 years and led the sheriff’s emergency tactical-response team. He has pledged to continue Ganrude’s transparency policies and daily news briefings for public accountability. On the ballot he faces fellow deputy Charles Rolbiecki, also a veteran with the sheriff’s department. Hazelton said that he and Rolbiecki have a good relationship. Win or lose, Hazelton said, he was confident they would continue working well together. The sheriff’s staff has 76 employees and includes the county jail and water patrols on the Mississippi River. The position pays $178,000.

Hazelton. One of his campaign yard signs now in Sheriff Ron Ganrude’s front lawn in St. Charles.
Utility renews plea to conserve power
RUSHFORD, Minn. — For a second consecutive day the co-op MiEnergy called on customers to unplug and dial down to conserve electricity. The alert was for the same peak usage period as the day before, from 2 to 6 p.m. Waves of severe morning thunderstorms , with as much as three inches of rain in parts of the MiEnergv service area, failed to cut continuing heat and oppressive humidity.
Murder threat reported in child custody mix-up
WINONA, Minn. — Police arrested a Winona man based on terroristic telephone threats against his girlfriend’s former boyfriend. Arrested was Tyler Eugene Kingsley, age 37, of Winona. The threat: “I’ll come to your house and kill you and your wife and your oldest child and burn your house down.” Police had been called about 8:15 a.m. to the girlfriend’s place, in the 150 residential block of East Fifth Street, to sort out a confused child custody exchange. While there, police learned of the call with the threat. The children in the house are 16 and 13, one of whom is subject to shared custody. Police believed the custody mix-up was innocent enough and due to the estranged father being in the process of moving.

Kingsley. Charge: Reckless terroristic threat. Jailed roughly three hours after police were called to unravel child custody issue.
Flash floods possible around Winona

Vulnerable. Northern Winona County mostly north of Intersatte 90 from western border to Mississippi River. Image: National Weather Service
Forecasters: Thunderstormms dropped “excessive rain”
WINONA, Minn. — Early morning thunderstorms roared through northern Winna County with torrential rains for almost three hours. The National Weather Service issued alerts for urban areas where overwhelmed storm sewers could back up into city streets. Vulnerable too were creek-side rural roads in low-lying areas. Specifically warned:
> Areas around Locks and Dam 5 and 5A.
> County Road 28 along Speltz Creek into Rollingstone.
> County Road 31 north of Altura.
> The communities of Altura, Bethany, Elba, Goodview, Lewiston, Minnesota City ,Rollingstone, St. Charles, Stockton, Utica, Whitman, Wilson, Winona and Wyattville
Ellison at helm in curbing Trump racism
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The national stature of Minnesota’s attorney general, Keith Ellision, grew a notch with the U.S. Supreme Court decision to uphold “birthright citizenship.” Ellison led a 24-state coalition against a racist Trump plan designed to deport millions of citizens born to foreign nationals on U.S. soil. This week the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that Trump and his racist aide, Stephen Miller, had conspired unconstitutionally to end protections for these birthright citizens. There are about 225,000 such babies born annually in the country. Trump and Miller had railed mostly against citizens of Somali and Haitian lineage, almost all of black skin, but also would have targeted people whose parents were from other “shithole countries.” Their goal: To apply a racial “purity” test for citizenship.
Earlier: Update: Trump’s beef with birthright citizenship
Notable journalism
Jeff Day (Minnesota Star Tribune, June 29, 2026): “Officials Tried to Protect a Baby Girl Born at Risk Minnesota; Three Months Later She Was Dead”
Reggie McLeod (Big River magazine, July-August 2026): “Data Centers and Power Lines”
Giri Viswanathan (Minnesota Star Tribune, June 29, 2026): “Minnesota Teens Face Fierce Competition for Summer Jobs This Year”
She showed bruises to cops; he denied assault
WINONA, Minn. — Police rescued a woman from a garage in which she said she locked herself to escape from an abusive boyfriend. Officers said the woman, age 41, was swollen and bruised. This was about 12:50 a.m. in the 400 block of Mankato Avenue. The assault, she said, had been in the house — that she was pushed backward onto bed, grabbed by the feet and pulled forward, and fell to the floor. Her elbow still hurt, she told officers. She said she kicked the boyfriend and ran to the detached garage in the alley and locked herself in. From there she called 911. Within an hour police located James Robert Hernstine, age 46, a couple blocks away on Chatfield Street. He denied any physical assault and said he had been locked nut and left for some fresh air. He was booked for domestic assault.
WELCOME
The worthiest goal of journalism is to promote intelligent citizen involvement. Such is our goal with Winona Journal. We focus on local issues so you can go about your daily activities with confidence that you can be a genuine and valued part of informed public dialogue on the kind of community we’re building.
Although Winona-centric, we are attentive also to regional issues. Our community doesn’t exist in a vacuum.
You will find opinion here. We quote and paraphrase with attribution so you know the source and can assess ideas and thoughts. Sometimes you will find our commentary but always clearly labeled.
As journalists we are committed to accuracy but not perfect. Please let us know if you spot an error, whether substantive or even just a dumb typo. We’ll get errors squared away promptly.
We’re glad you’re with us.