Anger to action: How DFLers transformed Minnesota abortion rights after Roe
High temperatures will run in the 90s from the Twin Cities westward most of this week. An air quality alert has been issued for elevated levels of ozone Tuesday through Thursday. Get the latest weather news on Updraft. 🎙️Coming up on Morning Edition: Skepticism surrounds the environmental impact of a new underground nickel mine that could be coming to Aitkin County. Talon Metals is expected to submit its plans for the mine any day. That will then kick off a review and permitting process. And if recent proposals for similar mining projects in Minnesota are any guide, that could take years. 🎧 Coming up at 9 a.m.: MPR News guest host Jacob Aloi speaks with the leaders of Theater Latté Da and Hennepin Theatre Trust, Peter Rothstein and Mark Nerenhausen , about their careers, the magic of live performances and what’s next for them as they prepare to leave their positions.
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| | Anger to action: How DFLers transformed Minnesota abortion rights after Roe | DFL lawmakers felt rage last June 24 as the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade. They channeled that anger into winning at the polls, then widening abortion access in ways that surprised even some supporters and angered opponents. Here’s how it happened. This is part one of a five-part series from MPR News examining the state of abortion in Minnesota one year after Roe v. Wade was overturned. | |
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| | Minnesota nickel mine brings environmental promise, but also concerns | Talon Metals is expected to soon submit plans to build an underground nickel mine outside the town of Tamarack, Minn., with the goal of supplying metals to build electric vehicle batteries. But skepticism over whether the company can mine safely persists. Mille Lacs Chief Executive Melanie Benjamin said the proposed mine is surrounded by valuable water resources — wetlands, groundwater, lakes and rivers — that are put at risk by this kind of mining. “When we think about that impact of mining, how it could have the potential to hurt our community through many unproven techniques, we cannot be a part of that grand experiment,” Benjamin said. “There is too much at stake.” | |
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