Exhausted hikers rescued in Bluffs Park
NODINE, Minn. — Overcome with fatigue, hikers called for help from a backtrail in Great River Bluffs State Park. A Nodine rescue team reached the hikers in an all-terrain vehicle and ferried them out. There were no injuries. This was about 3:20 p.m. The access was from Kipp Drive on the Nodine side of the 2,200-acre park. Vistors are pretty on their own. No full-time ranger.

Great River Bluffs State Park. Rises 500 feet on ridge connecting King’s Bluff and Queen’s Bluff.
Not yet: Repairs delay Winona pool season

Summer fun postponed. Upgrades and repairs not yet ready. Anybody have a backyard with a garden hose?
Temps coming at sweltering100 degrees
WINONA, Minn. — With the first 100-degree day of summer coming Tuesday, the Bob Welch aquatic park still isn’t open. The Winona Parks Department said the contractor performing major repairs on the 36-year-old facility has fallen behind. The target now is to open a week from Wednesday — 11 days late. When open, the park will have new heaters, chemical controllers, and a high-efficiency filtration system. Alternatives:
> Lake Lodge beach on Lake Winona.
> A small wading and splash pool at Levee Park.
bLaCanne Park beach in Goodview.
> Pubic pools with visitor fees 30 miles away in St. Charles, LaCresent, LaCrosse and Trempealeau.
> Indoor pool at Winona Y with visitor fee.
CHS shifts grain-shipping infrastructure
INVER GROVE HEIGHTS, Minn. – The giant CHS agri-business confirmed it’s closing three southeast Minnesota grain collection sites that truck their grain to Winona for downriver shipping and export. Being closed are elevators in:
> Kasson: In Dodge County, 55 miles from Winona.
> Ostrander: In Fillmore County, 66 miles.
> Wykoff. In Filmore County, 39 miles.
The company attributed the closings to “changes in the grain supply chain.” The company avoided explicit reference to the massive loss of U.S. foreign grain sales due the global Trump tariff war. The company also didn’t say how many jobs would be lost in Winona or the Kasson, Ostrander and Wykoff units. In the meantime the company promised to continue accepting crops from Dodge County and Fillmore County farmers through this fall’s harvest. CHS said that some local farmers likely will shift future crops to CHS collection points in Mankato and Fairmont.

Major Winona harbor presence. Where barges are filled with grain for shipment to Gulf ports for foreign customers. This has been a shrinking market since the Trump tariff wars. Image: Steve Lunde
Verbatim
CHS: “CHS continues to optimize its assets to best serve our owners while providing market access to the global ag supply chain. We continually evaluate our facilities to determine if they meet the needs of our cooperative system and our customers. While smaller facilities, such as these three, have served CHS well in the past, the grain supply chain in southern Minnesota has evolved into a market where local corn and soybean processing facilities and river terminals are the primary markets. CHS is committed to operating the right resources in the right locations to position our cooperative to deliver the best value for customers and owners. CHS will continue to operate in this region offering agronomy and energy products and services to producers in the area.”

CHS headquarters, Landscaped grounds in Inver Grove Heights.
Corporate profile
CHS is one of the largest farmer-owned cooperatives in Minnesota. Annual revenue: $555 million. Its operations include the consumer brand Cenex. CHS began in 1931 as the Farmers Union Central Exchange in St. Paul. Later the company became Cenex, from the combination of the last two words in its previous name. In 2003, after several mergers, the company changed its name to CHS. The company has swanky headquarters in the south Minneapolis suburb of Inver Grove Heights. Employees: 9,900. Chief executive Jay Debertin salary: $10 million a year in compensation package of $12 million.
Rider critical after Lanesboro motorcycle wreck
LANESBORO, Minn.— A Wisconsin woman was hospitalized in critical condition after a motorcycle-car collision outside Lanesboro on Saturday. Her name, Linnea Birgitta Rice, was released belatedly by the State Patrol. The Patrol was waiting for local authorities in her hometown, Galesville, to notify her family. Rice, age 53, was taken to a Rochester hospital, as was the motorcycle driver, who was less seriously injured.
Earlier: Winona biker hurt in Lanesboro crash
News summary at week’s end: June 6, 2026
POLITICS: What to expect in Trump’s Wisconsin visit
POLITICS: Rocco on You Tube: Why Chauvin deserves retrial
POLITICS: Bennett’s secret sidekick: Troubled fellow solon
POLITICS: Bennett gubernatorial ticket falls apart
ENVIRONMENT: Tyco pays up for fire foam contamination
ENVIRONMENT: Sunday forecast: Diminished air quality
RIVER: Milestone coming for new Lansing bridge
RIVER: Army Corps has plan to snuff out algae
RIVER: Dredging the Chippewa River delta
RIVER: Contractor sought for Lock and Dam 5 upgrade
SCHOOLS: Islamic holy day to be Rochester non-school day
CRIME: Drive-by shooter on probation five years
Winona biker hurt in Lanesboro crash
LANESBORO, Minn. — A Winona motorcyclist was injured in a collision on U.S. Highway 16 at the road out of Lanesboro to Mabel. Mathew Christian Barnholtz, age 57, suffered sustainable injuries. He was taken 32 miles to a Rochester hospital. With Barnholtz on his bike was a woman from Galesville in Wisconsin. Troopers delayed releasing her name until family could bc notified. They were westbound toward Preston. The driver of the second vehicle, Robert Lee, 74, of Rochester, was unhurt. Lee was in a lightweight 2024 Mitsubishi Mirage. Troopers said his airbag deployed. He was unhurt. The Barnholtz bike was a 2005 Harley FLHTCI Cruiser and heading east into Lanesboro. Barnholtz was not wearing a helmet, troopers said. They believed alcohol was a factor.
Sunday forecast: Diminished air quality
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency issued an air quality alert for people with impaired breathing capabilities. Ground-level ozone is expected to be high through Sunday from central Minnesota south to the Iowa border. The alert includes Fillmore, Houston, Wabasha and Winona counties. Especially vulnerable are people with lung and heartdiseases, children and older adults. Advice: Limit prolonged or heavy outdoor exertion.
Milestone coming for new Lansing bridge

Final link. Wisconsin and Iowa will be connected physically again on Thursday at Lansing when the central span of the new Mississippi River bridge is lifted into place. The span will be hoisted from a barge anchored in the navigation channel. River shipping and the temporary ferry service will be suspended a couple days. Project completion target: 2027.
Earlier: Lansing bridge: Good-bye, ol’ friend
Van stuck on Dakota tracks; trains stopped
DAKOTA, Minn. — An out-of-town traveler turned his van too tight into a vacation rental property and hung up on the Canadian Pacific’s mainline tracks. Winona County deputies called the railroad to halt freight trains both directions. A tow truck rushed 24 miles from Goodview and pulled the van off the tracks. Deputies said the van driver was of good mind and not impaired. The four Amtrak passenger trains that use the CP mainline already had passed through Dakota for the day.
Minnesota prep
Softball: St. Francis Fighting Saints 6, Byron Bears 1
Miner Valley disturbance ends in limbo
LAMOILLE, Minn. — A father called the sheriff’s office that that his adult daughter’s boyfriend had knocked him to the floor and caused minor injuries. This was up Moner Valley near Twin Bluffs about 8:50 p.m. The father told deputies that the boyfriend was keeping the daughter from leaving for work and that the boyfriend struck him when he intervened. By this time deupties were scenee, however, neither the father nor daughter wanted to pursue charges. Rather than escalate the situation, deputies took notes for the county attorney to assess what charges, if any, should be pursued. The boyfriend, deputies said, has a record io domestic abuse.
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Why did the turtle cross road?
ALTURA, Minn. — A deputy sheriff on patrol stopped to escort a large snapping turtle across State Highway 248. This was about 7:40 p.m. in a 55-mph zone downhill between Altura and Rollingstone. Although snapping turtles not an endangered species, wildlife experts advise motorists not run them down. Their armor is not sufficient to withstand the impact of a vehicle’s weight and speed. Also: The bump can startle an inattentive driver and cause an accident.

Laying season. May to July. You’ll see more on roads.
Creature profile
Snapping turtles can be combative, especially out of water. They have powerful beak-like jaws and highly mobile head and neck. The Latin name includes the word “serpentina,” which means “snake-like.” Typically they weigh 13 pounds but can be as heavy as 35. The laying season is approaching. Females like to leave their usual water environs, sometimes considerable distances, to lay in a dry area.
Islamic holy day to be Rochester non-school day
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Rochester Public Schools will add the Islamic feast day Eid-al-Adha to its 2028 calendar as a holiday. The holiday typically falls in May. The change was recommended by the district’s teachers and principals, who noted that absences on Eid-al-Adh have been high anyway.
Rocco on You Tube: Why Chauvin deserves retrial
DULUTH, Minn. — The mystery delegate at the Republican state convention, who created an unscheduled tribute to a convicted murderer, has posted an explanation of sorts on You Tube. In the 10-minute video, Christopher Rocco meanders through a confusing nonsequitur retinue that killer-cop Derek Chauvin was railroaded through an unfair trial for murdering George Floyd. Rocco claimed that Chauvin deserves a retrial and a federal pardon. At the convention Rocco had taken a microphone during a preliminary open-mic proceeding and asked for a moment of silence for Chauvin: “I apologize because I know you asked me not to do this. I’d like to suspend the rules for a moment of reflection for Derek Chauvin.” There was a roar of approval from the floor, although nobody at the moment seemed to recall the high-profile 2021 Chauvin trial that attracted national news attention — “Chauvin who?” Convention Chair Danny Nadeau bowed his head. In respectful quietude. So did the crowded auditorium with 2,300 delegates. After that the convention moved on to other matters as if nothing untoward had occurred.

Rocco. Flag-draped for his You Tube post. Where’d this guy come from: Nobody much knows.
Minnesota prep
Softball: Caledonia Warriors 5, Rockford Rockets 1
Softball: Adams Southland Rebels 3, Barnum Bombers 2
Army Corps has plan to snuff out algae
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Army Corp of Engineers has an idea to control invasive algae in lakes and ponds. The plan is to cover shorelines with clay. The Corps cited scientific evidence that opaque covers will halt algae spread with only minor adverse effects that would be temporary. The Corps plans to proceed with experiments only after reviewing public input. The deadline for citizen comments: June 29. If no red flags, the Corps plans experiments beginning this summer at three stormwater ponds in Minneapolis along Chicago Avenue..
What to expect in Trump’s Wisconsin visit
CHIPPEWA FALLS, Wis. — President Trump plans a one-day political swing to Chippewa County in northwest Wisconsin. His goal: To shore up his dismal approval ratings, now underwater 20 percentage points nationally. His following also is sagging in rural areas like Chippewa County because of upward spiraling diesel and fuel costs for farmers due to Trump’s Iran war, and lost farm export markets due to Trump’s global tariff war. Here’s what to expect in Trump’s Wisconsin visit:
> Eau Claire airport. Trump will arrive at the regional airport in Eau Claire (population 72,000). The airport has two runways. One is 5,000 feet and the other is 8,600. Both are too short for the requirements of the Boeing 747 Air Force One that Trump usually flies. He will be in a smaller plane, a Boeing 757, to land and take off.
> Motorcade. Several routes are available to the event’s host, Custer Farms, which is 10 miles north of Eau Caire in Chippewa County. Trump’s optics-conscious security usually chooses routes that are least likely to be lined with anti-Trump demonstrators.
> Custer Farms. A large dairy spread 12 miles west of Chippewa Falls (population 14,700)., the county seat. Custer Farms is operated by Kenneth D. Custer.

Custer Farms. Equidistant from Chippewa Falls and Eau Claire. Will be an indoor event, inside the dairy barn. Weather forecast: Rains perhaps drenching.

> Venue. A dairy barn has been set up with a long table facing 900 folding chairs for the event. Trump will be center stage at the long table with a cabinet retinue from Washington; Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson; WI-7 Congress member Tom Tiffany, who is running for governor; and WI-3 Congress member Derrick Van Orden.
> Audience: Carefully screened to assure security, to assure a friendly crowd, and to weed out dissidents.
> Political context. Chippewa County is solidly Republican. In 2016 Trump defeated Hillary Clinton 17,900 to 11,900. In 2020 he defeated Joe Biden 21,300 to 13,900. In 2024 he defeated Kamala Harris 23,400 to 14,700.
> Format: The White House used the misleading term “roundtable” for the event. It will not be a normal “roundtable,” in which voters would have opportunity to exchange thoughts and ideas.” Nor will it be a debate.” Trump will pontificate without any possibility for feedback or possibly inconvenient questions. Trump can be expected to invite pre-programmed praise from those at the front table.
> Seating. Trump will be seated for the entire event behind the draped front gavel. This will conceal his swollen legs, and the purple marks from excessive aspirin as a pain-reliever. There are staff concerns whether Trump has the stamina to be upright for extended periods.
> Music. Trump will enter from a “green room” behind the long table to a recording of “Take Me Home Country Roads” in which the late John Denver expresses disdain for urban life. There is irony here on Trump’s history as an urban New Yorker and in recent years as a Miami Beach billionaire.

In heart solidly Republican farm country. GOP yard signs no strangers in these parts.

Crash between Wilson, Winona hurts driver
WINONA, Minn. – A St. Charles driver was injured, albeit not seriously, in a two-vehicle accident on State Highway 43 heading downhill toward Winona. Scott Vernon Ehlenfeldt, age 40, was taken five miles to the Winona hospital for evaluation. The accident was about 5:30 p.m. near the Gilmore Valley turn-off. The vehicles, a 2015 Chevrolet Equinox driven by Ehlenfeldt, and a 2017 Subaru Outback driven by Angela Sue Weber, age 39, of Winona, were on a two-lane section of Highway 43. Weber and two toddlers, girls, ages 3 and 2, were unhurt. They were belted. State troopers said. Ehlenfeldt was not.
Bennett’s secret sidekick: Troubled fellow solon
LINO LAKES, Minn. — State Representative Elliott Engen has come forward as having agreed to be on Peggy Bennett’s gubernatorial ticket as her lieutenant governor. It was unclear when Bennett and Engen agreed to be team mates. Neither one ever announced the partnership. It is clear, now however, that their communication has been sporadic to say the least. It was in a text Tuesday that Engen notified Bennett that he was reneging. Engen had been a rising star in Minnesota Republican politics until March when he was arrested for driving drunk after skipping a House committee meeting. With Engen in the car was drinking buddy Walter Hudson, a fellow legislator, who was carrying a gun. Since then: Engen, age 27, has been under a House ethics investigation.
She said-he said
Questions linger about the now-aborted Bennett-Engen ticket to head Minnesota’s state government as governor and lieutenant governor. Both acknowledged the partnership Tuesday but neither explained why they never made it public earlier. Bennett claimed that Engen told her that he was considering a career move out of state. In his public statement. he made no such mention Oddly: About the same time Engen texted Bennett on Tuesday that he was bowing out, he was filing candidacy documents for re-election to his House District 36A seat.

Engen. In second term from House District 36A. Earlier in the year he campaigned for state auditor but withdrew. Politically a right-winger in the spirit of the late provocateur-orator Charlie Kirk.
Electoral history
> 2022: Engen defeated Susie Strom, a Democrat, 51% to 38% in House District 36A.
> 2024: Defeated Janelle Calhoun a Democrat, 54% to 45%.
> 2026: Lost the Republican endorsement for House District 36A to Jim DeMay, a fellow Republican. Regardless he filed for re-election as an unendorsed candidate in the August primary election.
Verbatim
Engen, in a public statement: “Peggy is a terrific servant-leader, and I wish I could be the partner she deserves in a lieutenant governor. . Unfortunately, this was not in the best interest of my family. Like so many other young families across our state, we aren’t in the financial position to have logistically made this work. For a leader like Peggy to have considered me for this position is truly humbling, and I hope someday our political system elevates voices like hers and turns away from coronating lukewarm conservative candidates. She’s a voice for reform in a state and party that desperately needs it, and I wish circumstances allowed me to be the partner she deserves.”
Dredging the Chippewa River delta

Unending challenge. At the Mississippi River bottleneck at Reads Landing, where the Chippewa River empties tons of western Wisconsin silt into the Mississippi annually. Dredging is a perennial chore for the Army Corps, which manages inland waterways. The challenge here for the Army Corps giant dredge Goetz: Keeping the Mississippi navigation channel at nine feet so barges don’t scrape bottom and get hung up. Image: Melanie Peterson
Bennett gubernatorial ticket falls apart
ALBERT LEA, Minn. — A long-shot Republican candidate for governor, Peggy Bennett, has quit the race. She was among several hopefuls who lost the GOP endorsement for governor at the party’s state convention over the weekend in Duluth. She had been expected, however, to proceed to file her candidacy as an unendorsed candidate. The filing deadline was 5 p.m. on Tuesday. She missed the deadline. In announcing Thursday that she was shutting down her campaign, Bennett said her choice for lieutenant governor had texted her about 1 p.m. on Tuesday that he was backing out. That was only four hours before the statewide filing deadline. The time to regroup was impossibly short, Bennett said. She had never identified her choice as a running mate and continued to shield his identity She said he explained in his Tuesday text that he was exploring a job out of state.
Electoral history
> 2014: Defeated Shannon Savick, a Democrat incumbent, 53% 40%, and Thomas Pices, an Independent , 7% in House District 27A.
> 2016: Defeated Gary Shudle, a Democrat, 62% to 37%.
> 2018: Defeated Terry Gjersvik, a Democrat, by 56% to 43%.
> 2020: Defeated Thomas Martiezm, a Democrat, 66% to 36%.
> 2022: Defeated Mary Heinnenkampo, a Democrat, 66% to 34% in renumbered House District 23A.
> 2024: Bennett defeated Joe Stakoch, a Democrat, 67% to 21%.

Bennett. A first-grade teacher 30 years in Albert Lea.. Age 67.
Verbatim
Bennett: “I was under the impression that he was ready to go. It is with great sadness and heartbreak that I announce that I am unable to move forward as a candidate for governor,. My 2026 campaign has ended. This is not by my choice.”
Drive-by shooter on probation five years
WINONA, Minn. — A judge accepted a plea deal for a Winona man who shot up houses in Rollingstone late at night a year ago. Kimari Jordan, age 22, received five years of probation and 100 hours of community service. Jordan and a companion drove along residential Speltz Drive in Rollingstone, 15 miles from Winona. Bullets hit two homes and an outbuilding No one was hurt. The second man, Damein Lamont Smith Jr., age 30, of Winona, also has negotiated a plea deal. His sentencing is scheduled for July.
Earlier: No more Rollingstone drive-by arrests seen
Earlier: Winona man jailed for mystery Rollingstone drive-bys
Earlier: Probe continuing in Rollingstone shootings
Earlier: Drive-by attacks: Bullets hit three Rollingstone homes
Tyco pays up for fire foam contamination
MARINETTE, Wis. — A northeast Wisconsin company, Tyco Fire Products, agreed to pay $10 million for contaminating well water with a fire-fighting foam. The foam contained cancer-causing PFAS, also known as “forever chemicals” because they never ever break down chemically. The State of Wisconsin sued Tyco in 2022, alleging that the company had been contaminating acres around a firefighting training center in this Green By community since the 1960s. In Madison the settlement was hailed by Governor Tony Evers as “a key step toward making su e polluters are held accountable, take responsibility for their actions, and ensure Wisconsinites don’t have to foot the bill for cleaning up the messes that others made.” Tyco is a corporate unit of Irish-owned Johnson Controls.
Contractor sought for Lock and Dam 5 upgrade
MINNESOTA CITY, Minn. — The Army Corps has called for bids to build impact cells for boats entering and leaving its lock on the Mississippi River upstream from Minnesota City. This is alongside U.S. Highway 61 and commonly called the Bass Camp dam. Construction is planned after the 2027 shipping season. The goal: To absorbs impact from barges and prevent structural damage.
News summary at mid-week: June 3, 2026
POLITICS: How Republicans came to their “Chauvin Moment”
POLITICS: Minnesota political parties’ 2026 choices
POLITICS: Trump plans trip to uneasy Wisconsin farm country
PLEBEIAN CUISINE: Is Winona coffee market verging on overfloweth?
RESCUE: River rescue: Powerless boat pulled ashore
CRIME: Thieves cart off Minneapolis museum works
CRIME: Mountain of charges against teen biker
CRIME: FBI: No prosecution for unruly air traveler
CRIME: Man back in Rochester jail on 2023 rape charge
ACCIDENT: Biker in Buffalo County wreck dies at hospital
SPORTS: High school girls wrestling OK’d to proceed
Earlier: News summary at week’s end: May 30, 2026
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