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”
“Free for taking” sign taken too literally
ST.CHARLES, Minn. — A man loaded a 10-cubic foot John Deere cart with items he wanted to give away. He pulled the cart to end of his driveway for passersby to sort through. The sign: “Free for the taking.” You guessed it: Somebody took the cart, valued at $380, and left everything else. This was on Equine Drive northeast of St. Charles.

Missing. But can it be considered truly stolen?
Winona Clinic open as retreat from heat
WINONA, Minn. — Winona Health invited anyone without access to mechanical cooling to spend the most oppressive hours of the day in the clinic lobby. The lobby is air-conditioned. Address: 855 Mankato Avenue. Intense heat and humidity were evident already at dawn. The heat index, which reflects what you feel with humidity factored in, was expected about 105 degrees.
Excess power draw expected on MiEnergy network
RUSHFORD, Minn. — The utility MiEnergy asked customers to conserve energy Tuesday afternoon when usage was expected t peak because of a heat spell. MiEnergy has customers in southeast Minnesota and adjoining Iowa counties. The peak was expected from 2 to 6 p.m. The utility’s grid supplier Dairyland Power, has a surcharge for peak usage. MiEnergy passes surcharges on to end-customers.
R.I.P.: Wayne Ledebuhr
WINONA, Minn. — Wayne William Ledebuhr, 74, of Winona, whose fascination with flight dated to childhood, died Thursday while landing his ultralight aircraft at the Winona airport. His family said in an obituary that he died doing what he loved: “Soaring through the skies above the town where he was born.” He earned a pilot’s license in his 20s. By age 28 he had made 500 sky dives. His schooling began in the one-room school house in Homer, then grade school at Washington-Kosciusko on the Winona East End. He started college at Winona State and earned a computer science degree at Aurora University in northern Illinois He was acting president of the Experimental Aircraft Association in Winona. He enjoyed “deep conversations” with fellow pilots at Winona airport hangars and hearing their stories. He owned several Hobie Cat sailboats over the years, a speedboat, and a pontoon bat. He regaled family and friends with tales about flying and Mississippi River boating. The family called him a “singular figure” with a dedication to others, a curiosity, and an adventurous spirit.
Details: Watkowski-Mukyck Funeral Home

1952-2026
Homeless man linked to collegian’s break-in
WINONA, Minn. — Police wrestled a man to the ground after stopping him on a bicycle with a distinctive college backpack that matched one stolen two days earlier. Arrested was Shawn Albert Hawley, age 49, who has no address but has been around town a while. Hawley was charged with having stolen property, including the backpack and U.S. mail. He also was charged with obstructing police. The arresting officer said he tried stopping Hawley on a bicycle in the 100 block of Second Street, but the man yelled: “I’m not talking to you now. I’m not in the mood.” Hawley tried pedaling off but was taken down and cuffed. This was about 8:30 p.m.

Hawley. Arrest was just after dark downtown
Pool open: Dippers, waders, swimmers rejoice
WINONA, Minn. — Staff training at the Bob Welch Aquatic Center has been completed for the long-awaited 2026 opening. Expect a line Tuesday for the event at 12:30 p.m. The opening couldn’t come too soon. A sweltering air mass of ultra-high humidity had settled into the region.with temperatures in the 90s
Earlier: Embarrassed city agency sets SMU as swim option
Court: No prison oorn for Iowa inmates
DES MOINES, Iowa —The Iowa Supreme Court upheld the Legislature’s 2018 law that banned prisoner access to pornographic material. Twelve inmates had claimed the law violated their constitutional rights as citizens. The Court acknowledged that inmates hold constitutional rights but that they are subject to restriction. The ruling was unanimous.
Lindell claims victory in libel settlement
DENVER — The $1.3 billion lawsuit against Minnesota’s MyPillow executive Mike Lindell for libels over the 2020 presidential election has been withdrawn. Lindell, now a candidate for Minnesota governor, called the decision a “win!” The circumstances of the withdrawal, however, were cloudy. Critical details of the deal were not announced. The now-dismissed suit had been filed against Lindell in 2021 for his false charges that voting machines manufactured by Dominion Voting Systems were rigged to throw the 2020 election against Donald Trump. Dominion sued not only Lindell but also right-wing media outlets that promulgated the same falsities. Unable to substantiate the falsities, Fox News paid Dominion $787 million. Newsmax paid $67 million. Lindell, however, had nothing to lose and refused to settle. His MyPillow company had collapsed. He was broke. He continued espousing his conspiracy theories. Since then these events have occurred.
> Trump was elected president in 2024.
> Trump has maintained his false narrative that the 2020 election was rigged and has sought to avenge the loss in every forum available.
> Among Trump’s targets continued to be Dominion, whose voting machines had been used in 27 states.
> Dominion was purchased last September by Trump-friendly Scott Leiendecker, who renamed it Liberty Vote.
Concerns arose immediaately about Leiendecker’s purchase. As a Republican election official in St. Louis, he had an insider’s knowledge of election mechanics and dynamics. The question: Was he a partisan figure who could control voting machines used nationwide? Put bluntly: Was he a Trump lackey. Leiendecker didn’t allay the concerns by aligning Liberty Vote with Trump’s 2025 executive order for sweeping election reforms to favor Republicans. At the same time Leiendecker was making statements like: “Liberty Vote signals a new chapter for American elections — one where trust is rebuilt from the ground up.” Was he saying that Dominion had indeed done bad? If so, the suggestion was that he had knowledge of a capacity for voting equipment to create false tallies.
Earlier: Minnesota political parties’ 2026 choices
Earlier: GOP convention backs Qualls for governor
Earlier: Glitter and dazzle: Lindell’s campaign debut

Leiendecker. A Republican activist who owns Dominion Voting Systems under a new corporate name.
Queen Anne’s Lace just starting to open

For a bride’s bouquet perhaps. Although not native to Minnesota, they’re plentiful. Some folks even consider them a common roadside weed, In California, however, they are pricey additions for bouquets. Here let them pair nicely with roadside orange “outhouse daylilies.” Image: Andy Frank
Campus food robots to new duty
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — Small robots that have ambled around many U.S. campuses delivering cafeteria food are being withdrawn. San Francisco-based Starship Technologies is reassigning the robots for more profitable duty fulfilling orders at grocery stores. The electric-powered six-wheeled robots use artificial intelligence and sensors to cross streets and navigate around obstacles. Starship began placing its robots campuses in 2019.

Starship robot. On mission delivering meals around campus.
Notable journalism
Sarah Nelson (Minnesota Star Tribune, June 22, 2026): “What to Know about Patrick Schiltz, the Federal Judge Who Has Pushed Back Against Trump”
Estefania Pinto Ruiz (Wisconsin State Farmer, June 22, 2026): “Grain Bin Accidents Remain Deadly: One Farmer Hopes His Family Story Can Help”
Victor Stefanescu (Minnesota Star Tribune, June 19, 2026): “Grocery Prices Are Surging Again: Minnesotans Are Coping in. Creative Ways”
He had stab wound; she said “accidental”
WINONA, Minn. — Police rushed a Winona man to the hospital with a screwdriver tip lodged in one arm from a fight with a girlfriend. Although painful, the wound was not lethal. The incident was about 4:40 p.m. in the 400 residential block of Hamilton Street. Police responded to a 911 call from a man who said he had been stabbed. Police found him outside with bleeding from his upper-right firearm. He said his girlfriend had done it it and barricaded herself inside. Officers made phone contact. She agreed to come out. Officers quoted her as saying she had no idea why they were there or why they wanted to talk with her. She eventually opened up, officers said, and admitted to a screaming matching match over fidelity. It turned physical, she told officers, and the boyfriend grabbed a small cosmetic mirror from her. Attempting to retrieve the mirror, she said she accidentally hit him with a screwdriver in her other hand. Arrested was Samantha Leann Ewing, age 45.

Ewing. Charge: Assault with a dangerous weapon.
Iowa driver rolls, hurt near Pine Island
PINE ISLAND, Minn. — An Iowa driver was injured when his light-weight sedan departed the roadway and oveturned off U.S. Highway 52 just of Pine Island. Hamilton Steve Guerrero, 18, of Waterloo, was taken 20 miles to a Rochester hospital. Zumbrota police described his injuries as non-life threatening. The accident was about 4 a.m. Guerrero was alone and belted in the 2003 Honda Accord. He was headed north toward St. Paul.
GOP pair’s strategically smart signage

Hard to miss exiting Walmart, the dominant Winona retailer. The signs are in your face at the T-bone onto Frontenac Drive. Johnson seeks to replace Jeremy Miller, who is retiring after 16 years in the State Senate from Winona-centric District 26. Repinski is the House 26-A incumbent. Need a job? School bus drivers needed. Image: Steve Lunde
News summary at week’s end: June 27, 2026
AVIATION: Winona aviation hobbyist dead in crash
POLITICS: GOP: We treated all candidates fairly
RIVER: Winona boater rescues semi-conscious man
CRIME: Weekend street riot: Police probe procedes
SCHOOLS: No insurance on vandalized school solar units
GOVERNANCE: Minneapolis to end homphobic ban on baths
GOVERNANCE: Multifold needs seen for Pickwick repairs
OUTDOORS: Thistles of the softest lavender
Riotous yeggs disrupt suburban fireworks show
OAKDALE, Minn. — A couple dozen unruly juveniles raised havoc at this east St. Paul suburb’s annual summer fireworks. Authorities regain control only after Police Chief Nick Newton called in sheriff’s deputies from two neighboring counties and police from nearby Woodbury and Maplewood. Newton acknowledged that festival-goers, mostly families with children, were in fear and panic. This was after sunset at Walton Park. No injuries were reported. Newton said his 31-officer department would be investigating how things got so out of hand. He said he had pre-assigned “a full contingent” of officers at the park. During the melee there was a report of people with guns, but Newton said he had.no confirmation of the reports.
Thistles of the softest lavender

A smaller variety. Not very prickly or invasive. Starting to bloom along East Burns Valley Road. Image: Andy Frank
Lewiston police officer moves to chief
LEWISTON, Minn. — A seven-year veteran with the Lewiston police force, Ben Coop, age 56, as been sworn in as chief. The position is full time and pays $54,000. Besides the chief, the department has four part-time time officers. The department relies on Winona County sheriff’s deputies when short-handed. The city population: 1,500.
Winona aviation hobbyist dead in crash
WINONA, Minn. — A Winona aviation enthusiast, Wayne William Ledebuhr, died when his self-built ultra-light aircraft crashed beside a runway at the Winona airport. Ledebuhr, age 74, was president of the Winona chapter of the Experimental Aircraft Association. Witnesses said Ledebuhr was landing when something went wrong. The aircraft was a 200-pound T-Light manufactured by Airborne Windsports Australia and sold as a kit. The T-Lite is designed to be quickly disassembled for ground transport. It is designed as both a cross-country powered aircraft and self-launching motoried glider for soaring.. It meets U.S. and international flight-worthiness standards as an ultra-light.

Ledebuhr. His second home was Max Conrad Field, where he died.
Emergency response
The crash occurred about 8 p.m. Emergency responders included four Winona offcers, rwo Goodview officers, two sheriff’s deputies, and fire and paramedic teams. Ledebuhr was dead at the scene.
T-Lite profile
Basically the T-Lite has a cable-braced hang-glider with a high wing, a single-seat open cockpit, tricycle landing gear, and a single engine behind the pilot. The propeller is a two-blade pusher, also behind the pilot. The aircraft is made of bolted-together aluminum tubing. The wing fabric is double-surface Dacron sail cloth finished with mylar. The wing is supported by a single tube. Control is by an A-frame weight-shift bar. The powerplant is a single cylinder, air-cooled, four-stroke designed for the craft. The fuel tank is 2.6 gallons behind the pilot. The tank can be disconnected quickly for refueling
> Specs: Wingspan: 31 feet. Max weight with pilot: 460 pounds.
> Performance: Cruise speed: 36 mph. Stall speed: 32 mph. Max speed: 53 mph.
> Record: The T-Lite is one model among the company’s 10 gliders and ultralights. A basic T-Lite costs from $1,500 to $3,000. Options can add another $1,500. Shipping rages from $100 to $300.
Not quite a warm welcoming to college
WINONA, Minn. — Parents who had been helping their college daughter move into rental housing reported the place had been burgled between their first and second trips over from Menomonee Falls in Wisconsin. This was in the 400 block of Huff Street across from Winona State University. Police were notified about 10 a.m. — as soon as the family returned the second day. They reported cigarette butts on a couch. Missing items included backpack emblazoned with a Winona State logo They found a first-floor window ajar — from some time after they left the day before. The family told police they had locked the door.
No insurance on vandalized school solar units
LEWISTON, Minn. — Replacing solar panels that were vandalized beyond repair at the Lewiston High School will cost $17,000, school leaders said in revising a preliminary estimate of $100.000. Even so, the expense constitutes a significant dent in the school budget. Because the solar array is in a field on the edge of campus, the school’s insurance carrier defines hem as “exterior property” and not covered.
Earlier: $100,000 damage to Lewiston solar array
Earlier: Charge ahead: Lewiston schools go solar
Pilot dead in crash at Winona airport
WINONA, Minn. — A pilot was killed when his light airplane crashed at dusk at the Winona airport. Details initially were sketchy. It was understood that the victim was a male in his 70s or 80s. He was alone in the plane. First-responders were unable to revive him. The crash occurred about 8 p.m.
Max Conrad Field. Sandwiched between Prairie Island to the north and Winona suburb of Goodview on the south. Area pocked with abandoned gravel pits.

Single runway. Asphalt runway is 5,100 feet. Has medium intensity approach lighting system with runway alignment indicator lights.
Airfield profile
Opened in 1942 on former Mississippi River backwaters. Used for military training during World War II. Bears the name of record-setting early Winona aviator. Formally known as Winona Municipal Airport or “ONA” in airtalk. No schedule airline sevice since 1970. Home now to 30 hangared aircraft — 26 single-engine, 2 multi-engine, one jet and one glider. About 30 operations a day.
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