Air Force pilot safely ejects before F-16 fighter jet crashes in California desert

posted in: All news | 0

TRONA, Calif. (AP) — A fighter jet with the Air Force’s elite Thunderbirds demonstration squadron crashed in the Southern California desert Wednesday, but the pilot managed to eject safely, the military said.

Related Articles


Black men who were fired from key transportation boards accuse Trump of a pattern of discrimination


Hearing in Luigi Mangione’s state murder case sheds new light on his arrest


Wall Street hangs near its all-time high as calm continues to hold


A quiet corner of Arkansas has become a hot spot for US immigration crackdown, AP finds


US filings for jobless benefits fall to 191,000, lowest since September of 2022

The pilot was being treated at a hospital for injuries that were not life-threatening, according to the San Bernardino County Fire Department.

The F-16C Fighting Falcon crashed around 10:45 a.m. during a training mission “over controlled airspace in California,” according to a statement from Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada.

The fire department said it had responded to an “aircraft emergency” near Trona, an unincorporated community in the Mojave Desert about 180 miles north of Los Angeles.

In 2022, a Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet crashed near Trona, killing the pilot.

Wednesday’s crash is under investigation and further information will be released from the 57th Wing Public Affairs Office, the Air Force statement said.

Like the Navy’s Blue Angels, the Air Force Thunderbirds perform their famous tight formations at air shows, and train to fly within inches of each other. The brief statement from the Air Force did not give details on the circumstances of the crash.

The Blue Angels and Thunderbirds have had dozens of crashes in their long histories.

Formed in 1953, the Thunderbirds practice seasonally out of Nellis Air Force Base near Las Vegas. Aircraft based there include F-16 Falcon and F-22 Raptor fighter jets as well as A-10 Warthog ground-attack jets.

Minnesota projects $2.5B surplus now, $3B shortfall later in decade

posted in: All news | 0

Minnesota’s projected budget surplus has grown to nearly $2.5 billion in the current two-year budget cycle, though an expected shortfall of almost $3 billion remains for the following two years.

The new budget forecast released Thursday by the Minnesota Department of Management and Budget shows a slight improvement over its March forecast, when state officials projected a $456 million surplus in the 2026-2027 biennium and a $6 billion shortfall in 2028-2029.

Growth in the projected surplus is the result of a “better-than-expected fiscal year close and higher near-term revenue collections, partially offset by increased spending estimates,” MMB said in a summary of its November forecast.

“Minnesota’s budget and economic outlook remains stable in the current biennium; however, structural budget challenges remain,” the agency said.

Higher health care costs and slow economic growth remain a challenge for the state later in the decade, according to MMB.

Meanwhile, the state’s general fund reserves remain “strong” and at their statutory target of $3.8 billion.

The updated numbers are a significant improvement over the last major update from state budget officials in March. Then, they warned that “significant near-term economic and fiscal uncertainty” from tariffs and other policy changes under President Trump could hurt the state’s fiscal position.

It’s yet to be seen how federal program cuts might affect Minnesota’s budget in the coming years.

The state was in a much better fiscal position more than two years ago, when MMB projected a nearly $18 billion surplus.

That year, Democratic-Farmer-Labor-controlled state government passed a more than $70 billion state budget that grew spending by nearly 40% — with a lot of the increase coming from one-time spending.

In June, a Legislature divided closely between the DFL and Republicans passed a $66 billion two-year budget, close to $5 billion less than the 2023 budget.

Special education transportation aid is one of the biggest areas for cuts. State leaders said that they’d have to curb spending this year to address shortfalls looming later this decade.

MMB will give a more detailed presentation to the press on its budget forecast at a noon news conference. Gov. Tim Walz and legislative leaders of both parties are also set to deliver remarks on the updated numbers.

The November forecast, typically released in the first week of December, gives Minnesota lawmakers insights on the state’s fiscal picture as they prepare to return to the Capitol for the legislative session early in the following year.

An updated forecast MMB releases in early March is generally when the Legislature begins deciding how it will spend money. Though the state will not have to pass a two-year budget in 2026, as this happens in odd-numbered years.

Past state budgets

Here’s a listing of past state two-year budgets:

• 2023 — $72 billion.

• 2021 — $52 billion.

• 2019 — $48 billion.

• 2017 — $46 billion.

• 2015 — $41.5 billion.

• 2013 — $38 billion.

• 2011 — $35.7 billion.

Check back for updates on this developing story.

Related Articles


State funding secured for plans to honor Gordon Parks in St. Paul


How will Kaohly Her’s legislative career shape her leadership of St. Paul?


Report revives claims Minnesota fraud funded terrorists. Here’s what we know.


Washington state’s paid leave program struggles. Will MN be different?


St. Paul Mayor-elect Kaohly Her announces transition team

‘This group is ready’: Young, tested Gophers volleyball team set for NCAA run

posted in: All news | 0

“This group is ready.”

Those three words from Minnesota Gophers head coach Keegan Cook carry a lot of weight. Cook will likely be starting five freshmen in the No. 4 seed’s opening NCAA Tournament match against Fairfield on Friday at Maturi Pavilion.

It has been a mixed-bag all season for Minnesota (22-9), which entered the year with a talented roster and a redshirt freshman setter in Stella Swenson. She turned out to be an anchor for the Gophers in her first season of action due to injuries to four starting-caliber players around the setter.

Cook said it has been a year like no other, and he appreciates his young players’ ability to learn on the fly in the Big Ten, winning many matches along the way.

“You have a team, you lose a team, then you have a new team of people, and I just think the athletes are really patient (and) persistent,” Cook said.
“… Usually, you’re trying to bring one or two freshmen online, let alone five, and a transfer who hasn’t played for you. That’s a lot of relationship building in a short amount of time.”

Cook said his team is peaking at the right time and playing its best volleyball in the month of November. Highly-touted freshman outside hitter Kelly Kinney has embodied Minnesota’s ascension as she’s acclimated to college volleyball.

Julia Hanson, the lone Gophers starter with NCAA Tournament experience, said Kinney has hit her stride at the right time.

“Normally, you see freshmen start out high and then they bottom out just because it’s the longest season they’ve ever seen, and that’s the complete opposite with Kelly,” Hanson said.

Swenson said the two have developed a strong relationship on and off the court, picking each other up and crafting chemistry. Kinney is second on the team in kills (231) and kills per set (2.33).

Swenson said the faith Cook placed in this squad allowed the freshmen to flourish.

“Just the fact that he is there for us and backs us up is really cool, because it allows us to play free,” Swenson said. “… We’ve had a really hard year, but he still expects us to ball out and play like ourselves.”

The Gophers will look to turn that belief into results and memories at home this weekend. Minnesota is coming off a bittersweet final week of the regular season, beating No. 11 Purdue but falling in straight sets to Wisconsin on senior night.

Cook said his team went back to basics this week in two strong practices after the Wisconsin match and is preparing to face a balanced attack against the Fairfield Stags.

“From day one of this week, it’s been about eye work and defending against three hitters in the front row,” Cook said. “(The Stags) run a really nice 6-2 (system). No one gets leaned on too much in the offense. And so, they’re gonna keep you honest, and everyone has to win their individual battles, and your eye work has to be really clean.”

Cook said this NCAA Tournament field is the deepest and most talented it has ever been.

The Stags went 25-5, including 17-1 in conference play, to claim both the MAAC regular-season and the tournament titles to clinch their spot in the postseason. St. Thomas will meet Iowa State in the other first-round match in Minneapolis at 4:30 p.m. Friday.

Minnesota is hosting the opening weekend of tournament action for the first time since 2022. The Gophers finished that year with a 22-9 record after winning both matches at Maturi Pavilion before falling to No. 9 Ohio State in the round of 16.

Related Articles


NCAA Women’s Volleyball: Gophers, Tommies both start in Minneapolis


College Volleyball: Wisconsin’s offense overpowers Minnesota


Gophers volleyball: Freshman star setter Stella Swenson keeps Minnesota on track


LOVB plans to start professional volleyball team in Minnesota


Gophers volleyball inks star recruits from Eagan, Centennial

Black men who were fired from key transportation boards accuse Trump of a pattern of discrimination

posted in: All news | 0

By JOSH FUNK, AP Transportation Writer

Two Black men who were fired by President Donald Trump from the National Transportation Safety Board and U.S. Surface Transportation Board accused the administration on Thursday of discriminating against them as part of a pattern of dismissing Black leaders across the government.

Robert Primus on the STB and Alvin Brown on the NTSB were the only Black board members overseeing their officially independent agencies when they were fired this year, in August and in May. Both had already filed lawsuits challenging their dismissals, saying the White House didn’t have good cause, as the law requires. Democracy Forward filed the new discrimination claims on behalf both men.

“When you look at who has been removed without cause, and who has been left in place, the pattern is impossible to ignore: Black commissioners across the federal government have been summarily fired,” said Brown, who was Vice Chairman of the NTSB. “My abrupt removal was unlawful, and it was discriminatory.

The White House didn’t immediately respond to the new legal filing, but has said Trump was well within his legal rights to fire Primus and Brown. The administration hasn’t filed a formal response to Primus’ lawsuit yet, but the Trump administration asked a judge to dismiss Brown’s lawsuit, arguing that the statutory protection saying board members can only be fired for cause is unconstitutional, and that the president should be able to pick his team at every executive agency.

When Brown was fired, experts said they couldn’t remember anyone ever being fired from the NTSB, which is tasked with investigating disasters across all modes of transportation to determine what caused them and make recommendations to prevent similar tragedies from ever happening again. The NTSB is currently investigating nearly 1,250 cases including the collision of a passenger jet and Army helicopter over Washington, D.C., that killed 67 people in January.

Primus was pushed off the STB shortly after Union Pacific proposed its $85 billion acquisition of Norfolk Southern railroad, a massive deal the five-member board will consider approving over the next year or two. He was the only member of the STB to oppose Canadian Pacific’s acquisition of Kansas City Southern railroad in 2023 because he was concerned about the impact on competition. Trump has said he thinks the Union Pacific deal sounds good.

By law, no more than three of the five members of each board can be from one party. Primus and Brown are Democrats. Primus was nominated for his position by Trump during his first term, named board chairman by President Joe Biden and led the board until Trump began his second term and elevated Board member Patrick Fuchs to chairman. Primus’ lawyers pointed out that the other Democratic member of the STB was allowed to continue serving.

Related Articles


Florida starts redistricting talks in a growing battle for House control in 2026 elections


Kennedy’s vaccine advisory committee meets to discuss hepatitis B shots for newborns


NY attorney general challenges authority of acting US attorney investigating her Trump lawsuits


Trump’s immigration message is colliding with his welcome to World Cup fans


Lawmakers hear from Navy admiral who ordered attack that killed boat strike survivors

On the NTSB, another of the Democratic members, who is white, has continued serving beyond the expiration of his term the end of 2023, as is customary to do until a replacement is confirmed. But Brown was the one dismissed, even though he was scheduled to serve through the end of 2026. Trump nominated a white man to replace him.

The lawsuits argue that these firings reflect Trump’s broadening antipathy to seeing people of color in government positions: “This trend fits with President Trump’s consistent messaging criticizing diversity and inclusion and his clear and demonstrable emphasis on hiring white people.”

Trump has fired a string of board members at various agencies that are supposed to be independent including the Federal Reserve, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The Senate Commerce Committee will consider advancing the nominations of both men’s replacements to a vote next week.