MPR News Update
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Good morning. It’s freezing out. Here’s what you need to know to start your Thursday. 


Wear many layers if you must go outside today. Seriously — Twin Cities highs will be around 3 with wind chills around minus 25 this morning. It’ll get only 5 to 10 degrees warmer at night. Statewide highs range from minus 2 to 6 above zero. At night, northeast low temps between minus 9 and minus 15; southwest lows between 5 below and 3 above zero. More on Updraft. |  Forecast


Then, a foot of snow is coming. The Twin Cities could see as much as 15 inches of snow in what meteorologist Paul Huttner says could be the biggest storm of the month


Friday is the first day Minnesotans can cast their pick for president. Early voting for the state’s first presidential primary since 1992 begins Friday. Reporter Brian Bakst visited some local elections officials to see how they’re preparing. Are you planning to vote Friday? We’d like to hear from you. 


Minnesota’s most in-demand jobs don’t pay enough to live here. Max Nesterak of the newly launched Minnesota Reformer dives into why low-wage workers haven’t benefited from the growing economy and how difficult it is for many people to make ends meet: “Of the 10 most in-demand jobs in Minnesota right now, only half pay the $15 an hour needed to meet the basic costs of living in the state. And that’s assuming you’re single, with no kids or anyone else to support, don’t have student debt, can find a cheaper-than-average home, and can get 40 hours of work each and every week — not a typical scenario.”


A new law offers some protection for affordable housing renters. The law states that landlords may not increase rents more than once every year, a change which comes after tenant complaints of rent increases just a month after moving in. 


See a fishy piece of political news? T ell us about it so we can continue reporting on disinformation in the 2020 election.

Cody Nelson, MPR News
Older actors find a stage where age is no problem
At Theatre 55, people get to play parts they thought were outside their range.
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Senate takes over Trump's impeachment after House handoff
Opening arguments are to begin next Tuesday after the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
2019 was the 2nd-hottest year on record, according to NASA and NOAA
It's the latest confirmation that the Earth is steadily getting hotter — the planet has already warmed about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit (or almost 1 degree Celsius) compared with in the mid-20th century — and that robust greenhouse gas emissions are causing global warming to continue unabated.
Virginia ratifies the Equal Rights Amendment, decades after the deadline
The ERA's provisions include a guarantee that "equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged ... on account of sex." But its legal status is uncertain.
Prominent acid rain researcher Eville Gorham dies
The longtime University of Minnesota professor's landmark research contributed to the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty in 1963 and to the Clean Air Act Amendment of 1990. 
Art Hounds: Abstract reflections on rural flight
Heidi Jeub's abstract paintings contemplate what it means for a community to lose itself; plus, Art Hounds recommend a visit to Franconia Sculpture Park in the heart of winter, and a storyteller's account of "How the Wild West was Spun."
What's on the radio today?

9 a.m. — Flyover 2020

When it comes to the flipped counties of the Midwest, is identity politics helping or hurting?


10 a.m. — 1A 

The crackdown on "illegal" immigration continues -- but the squeeze on “legal” immigration has left many families in limbo. The agency that issues green cards and grants U.S citizenship stopped characterizing America as "a nation of immigrants" in 20-18. Who, now, is legally welcome?


11 a.m. —  MPR News with Angela Davis 

We’ll have the latest edition of Counter Stories, our regular conversation about race, identity and social justice.


12 p.m. — MPR News Presents

The broadcast of a new documentary from the Humankind series: "Ida B. Wells' Battle to Uncover the Truth." Born into slavery, Ida B. Wells became a ground-breaking investigative journalist in the 1890s and exposed the domestic terrorism practiced by white supremacists, including lynching. Included in the documentary are Bryan Stevenson of the Equal Justice Initiative, historian David Blight, Nikole Hannah-Jones of the New York Times 1619 Project, and Wells biographer Paula Giddings. Produced by David Freudberg in association with WGBH Boston.

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