Farm Aid will be broadcast live on CNN from Huntington Bank Stadium

posted in: All news | 0

The first Farm Aid to be held in Minnesota has added another first: The final five hours of the charity concert on Sept. 20 will be broadcast on CNN.

The cable network will air the concert live from Huntington Bank Stadium from 6 to 11 p.m. and will include performances from Farm Aid board member artists Willie Nelson and Family, Neil Young and the Chrome Hearts, John Mellencamp, Dave Matthews with Tim Reynolds and Margo Price.

CNN Anchors John Berman and Laura Coates will co-anchor the special coverage from the stadium, while chief climate correspondent Bill Weir will provide on-the-ground reporting.

CNN will also stream the event live on cnn.com and via CNN’s apps on connected TVs and mobile devices, without requiring a cable login.

In addition, fans can stream the event for free via farmaid.org and nugs.net or the organizations’ YouTube channels.

As it has been for 16 years now, SiriusXM is the exclusive audio-only broadcaster of Farm Aid, which will be broadcast on Willie’s Roadhouse (channel 61) and Dave Matthews Band Radio (channel 30) in cars and on the SiriusXM app. The Willie’s Roadhouse channel will also air replays on Thanksgiving Day and Nov. 30.

Fine Line event

Organizers have also announced a pre-festival event at 8 p.m. Sept. 18 at the Fine Line in Minneapolis.

The concert features Rissi Palmer, who is this year’s Academy of Country Music Lift Every Voice award recipient. It’s meant to “honor the legacy of diverse artists and farmers and lift up their lasting influence on roots music, culture and community that inspires us all.” Tickets go on sale at noon Friday through Axs.

The rest of the Farm Aid lineup includes Lukas Nelson, Kenny Chesney, Billy Strings, Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats, Trampled by Turtles, Wynonna Judd, Steve Earle, Waxahatchee, Eric Burton of Black Pumas, Jesse Welles, Madeline Edwards and the Wisdom Indian Dancers.

Now in its 40th year, Farm Aid is a nonprofit annual festival that has raised more than $85 million to support family farms, promote sustainable agriculture and strengthen rural communities.

Tickets for Farm Aid are priced from $390 to $101 and are available now at farmaid.org.

Related Articles


Concert review: A Taylor Swift cover band had kids singing and dancing at the Grandstand


Minnesota’s first K-pop convention coming to St. Paul RiverCentre


Concert review: Nelly and Ja Rule turn the Grandstand into the biggest party in town


Concert review: The Avett Brothers rock up the folk at the State Fair Grandstand


State Fair Grandstand review: Daryl Hall and the Rascals offer a sweet night of soul to a state in need

After shuttering pain center, Allina’s United Hospital to close infusion center Friday

posted in: All news | 0

Gail Millette has visited United Hospital’s infusion center since it opened in 1999, relying on regular infusions of calcium and magnesium — and sometimes lengthy blood transfusions — to stay alive. Those visits, at least twice a week, have made all the difference for Millette, 66, of St. Paul, who had her overactive thyroid removed as a teen.

After this week, she and other United Hospital patients who receive regularly-scheduled transfusions, long-acting injections for mental health disorders or other infusion-based therapies will have to look elsewhere for care.

On Friday, United will close the doors to its primary infusion center outside downtown St. Paul, shuttering the metro area’s only infusion center dedicated to non-chemotherapy patients. The decision comes two years after a similar closure at Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis, which also is run by Minneapolis-based Allina Health.

Given “bumping rights” under organized labor contracts, the five nurses dropped from the infusion center will be relocated to other departments within the hospital, forcing lay-offs of nurses with less seniority.

For United, it will mark the second departmental closure and the second round of nursing lay-offs in recent months. On July 25, the St. Paul hospital closed its pain center in a move blamed on “provider shortages,” dropping seven nurses while forcing patients to seek out alternative sites for critical pain management.

The St. Paul-based infusion center serves some 20 patients per day, with appointments booked at least two or three weeks in advance, according to impacted employees, who say Allina — which oversees 12 hospital campuses in Minnesota and western Wisconsin — just recently issued widespread notice to patients this August that the department is shutting down in a few days time.

A cost-driven consolidation

Allina Health has sought to reassure patients needing intravenous medicines and fluids that they can still receive services at two more specialized clinical sites on the United campus, or at Allina’s rural clinics and hospitals. Nurses employed at the infusion center point out, however, that those sites are already overloaded by patient demand or lack the full range of services available at United.

“Most of the infusion centers don’t have a pharmacist on staff, so they couldn’t take me,” said Millette, who needs a pharmacist to mix the cocktail of calcium and magnesium that’s pumped into her body. Her blood transfusion appointments can take up to five hours, making travel time an added concern.

“When they so cavalierly suggested ‘you can just go to Minneapolis, or to Crystal, or Coon Rapids,’ well no, I live in downtown St. Paul,” Millette said. “The mental health patients who aren’t always medically compliant with their meds, what are they going to do? Some of them will probably end up being less compliant. And that’s really sad.”

Hospital management has described the infusion center’s closure as a cost-driven consolidation, noting that the United Hospital campus will continue to offer infusion care at both the Allina Health Cancer Institute and the Allina Health United Medical Specialties Clinic Infusion Center, which is located within the Nasseff Specialty Center on Smith Avenue.

The hospital system suffered significant operating losses in 2022 and 2023, but made a $344 million turnaround last year, according to Becker’s Hospital Review.

“As part of this consolidation … Allina Health will help patients transition their care to two remaining infusion centers at our United Hospital campus … or another Allina Health infusion center in the metro area,” said a spokesperson for the health system, in an email last week.

“We are grateful for the excellent care our compassionate care team members have provided for our patients,” the email went on to say. “We will work with impacted care team members to find other positions within the Allina Health system.”

Nursing staff have said United’s Cancer Institute and Specialties Clinic infusion centers are both short-staffed. Both sites have referred patients to the hospital’s primary infusion center on a daily basis, especially for rheumatology infusion services and other non-chemotherapy treatments, according to staff.

“United Medical Specialties was sending their patients to us because they didn’t have the staff,” said a nurse at the infusion center, who asked not to be identified as they are not authorized to speak on behalf of their employer. “We were taking patients for both those sites and were booked out for weeks.”

Abbott Northwestern dropped its infusion center in 2023

In a previous consolidation, Allina shut down the infusion department at Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis in October 2023, giving patients less than a month to locate alternative sites. At the time, United Hospital was the closest option available outside of the Abbott Northwestern campus, but that will no longer be the case Friday.

Erin Moriarty, a spokesperson for the Minnesota Nurses Association, released a written statement on Tuesday calling the latest closure a threat to patient care. She noted that Allina has cut staffing level in hospitals and outsourced some services while taking in hefty revenue from a laboratory services venture with New Jersey-based Quest Diagnostics, as well as other partnerships with for-profit companies such as UnitedHealth Group.

“The closure of the Abbott Infusion Center left patients scrambling to find care, with less than a month’s notice,” Moriarty wrote. “Many of those patients transferred to United’s infusion center and will now be forced to make yet another transition. This closure also leaves the metro area without an infusion center dedicated to non-chemo patients.”

Nurses also fear that Allina infusion centers based in rural locations such as Hastings, Lakeville and Faribault may not be well positioned to absorb such a wide range of referrals and patient demands, or be ready to balance treatment for patients with complex chemotherapy regimens alongside non-chemotherapy patients. While United Hospital has its own mother-baby center, most Allina locations do not.

From blood transfusions to antibiotics, chemotherapy

Infusions can range from blood transfusions to the administration of intravenous or intramuscular antibiotics, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, hydration and additional therapies for chronic conditions like chronic pain, autoimmune disorders and cancer.

The centers also inject long-acting drugs for schizophrenia and other mental health disorders.

The Minnesota Nurses Association noted that some infusion centers do not currently service patients needing high-risk medications, or who are pregnant, or do not offer blood transfusions because they’re not attached to a hospital, or do not have a pharmacist. Some currently only take Allina patients.

In addition to serving Allina patients, infusion center staff said the United Hospital site receives referrals from outside neurology clinics facing their own staffing shortages, as well as oncology clinics that lack the capacity to administer blood transfusions. Even OB-GYN clinics and mental health clinics use the center for patient injections.

“Excluding Allina providers, we have worked with over 35 different facilities,” said an infusion center nurse.

“It seems to me that there’s a pattern of taking patients who are not on commercial insurance and tossing them to the side,” she continued. “If you’re homeless or rely on medical rides, being directed to Lakeville or Faribault is insane. I don’t know that public transition will even get you there. Transportation, especially for the mental health population, is a challenge.”

Related Articles


Florida will work to eliminate all childhood vaccine mandates in the state, officials say


What is hydrogen sulfide? Toxic gas eyed in dairy deaths is infrequent but dangerous feature of agricultural work


Washington County: Deadline for community-based opioid projects funding is Oct. 10


Column: What you need to know about donating blood


American kids are less likely to reach adulthood than foreign peers

Trump plans to ask Supreme Court to toss E. Jean Carroll’s $5 million abuse and defamation verdict

posted in: All news | 0

By MICHAEL R. SISAK, Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump will soon ask the Supreme Court to throw out a jury’s finding in a civil lawsuit that he sexually abused writer E. Jean Carroll at a Manhattan department store in the mid-1990s and later defamed her, his lawyers said in a recent court filing.

Trump’s lawyers previewed the move as they asked the high court to extend its deadline for challenging the $5 million verdict from Sept. 10 to Nov. 11. The president “intends to seek review” of “significant issues” arising from the trial and the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals’ subsequent decisions upholding the verdict, his lawyers said.

Carroll’s lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, said Wednesday: “We do not believe that President Trump will be able to present any legal issues in the Carroll cases that merit review by the United States Supreme Court.”

Related Articles


Washington, Oregon and California governors form a health alliance in rebuke of Trump administration


Epstein survivors implore Congress to act as push for disclosure builds


Utah’s congressional map must be redrawn now, judge rules


Blue states that sued kept most CDC grants, while red states feel brunt of Trump clawbacks


Podcasters and influencers: The unexpected jobs covered under Trump’s ‘no tax on tips’ plan

Carroll testified at a 2023 trial that Trump turned a friendly encounter in spring 1996 into a violent attack in the dressing room at Bergdorf Goodman, a luxury retailer across the street from Trump Tower. The jury also found Trump liable for defaming Carroll when he made comments in October 2022 denying her allegation.

A three-judge appellate panel upheld the verdict last December, rejecting Trump’s claims that trial Judge Lewis A. Kaplan’s decisions spoiled the trial, including by allowing two other Trump sexual abuse accusers to testify. The women said Trump committed similar acts against them in the 1970s and in 2005. Trump denied all three women’s allegations.

In June, 2nd Circuit judges denied Trump’s petition for the full appellate court to take up the case. That left Trump with two options: accept the result and allow Carroll to collect the judgment, which he’d previously paid into escrow, or fight on in Supreme Court, whose conservative majority — including three of his own appointees — could be more open to considering his challenge.

Trump skipped the 2023 trial but testified briefly at a follow-up defamation trial last year that ended with a jury ordering him to pay Carroll an additional $83.3 million. The second trial resulted from comments then-President Trump made in 2019 after Carroll first made the accusations publicly in a memoir.

Judge Kaplan presided over both trials and instructed the second jury to accept the first jury’s finding that Trump had sexually abused Carroll. Judge Kaplan and Carroll’s lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, are not related.

In their deadline-related filing, Trump’s lawyers said Kaplan compounded his “significant errors” at first trial by “improperly preventing” Trump from contesting the first jury’s finding that he had sexually abused Carroll, leading to an “unjust judgment of $83.3 million.”

The 2nd Circuit heard arguments in June in Trump’s appeal of that verdict but has not ruled.

Trump has had recent success fending off costly civil judgments. Last month, a New York appeals court threw out Trump’s staggering penalty in a state civil fraud lawsuit.

The Associated Press does not identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Carroll has done.

Washington, Oregon and California governors form a health alliance in rebuke of Trump administration

posted in: All news | 0

By MARTHA BELLISLE, Associated Press

SEATTLE (AP) — The Democratic governors of Washington, Oregon and California announced Wednesday that they have created an alliance to establish their own recommendations for who should receive vaccines because they believe the Trump administration is putting Americans’ health at risk by politicizing the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The announcement came the same day that Florida said it will phase out all childhood vaccine mandates. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis plans to curb vaccine requirements and other health mandates that evolved during the COVID-19 pandemic in his state.

The differing responses come as COVID-19 cases rise and as Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has restructured and downsized the CDC and attempted to advance anti-vaccine policies that are contradicted by decades of scientific research. Concerns about staffing and budget cuts were heightened after the White House sought to oust the agency’s director and some top CDC leaders resigned in protest.

“The CDC has become a political tool that increasingly peddles ideology instead of science, ideology that will lead to severe health consequences,” the governors said in a joint statement.

“The dismantling of public health and dismissal of experienced and respected health leaders and advisers, along with the lack of using science, data, and evidence to improve our nation’s health are placing lives at risk,” California State Health Officer Erica Pan said in the news release.

Washington state Health Secretary Dennis Worsham said public health is about prevention — “preventing illness, preventing the spread of disease, and preventing early, avoidable deaths.”

“Vaccines are among the most powerful tools in modern medicine; they have indisputably saved millions of lives,” Oregon Health Director Sejal Hathi said. “But when guidance about their use becomes inconsistent or politicized, it undermines public trust at precisely the moment we need it most.”

Partnership seeks expert medical advice

The three states plan to coordinate their vaccine recommendations and immunization plans based on science-based evidence from respected national medical organizations, said a joint statement from Gov. Bob Ferguson of Washington, Gov. Tina Kotek of Oregon and Gov. Gavin Newsom of California.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services spokesman Andrew G. Nixon shot back in a statement Wednesday that “Democrat-run states that pushed unscientific school lockdowns, toddler mask mandates, and draconian vaccine passports during the COVID era completely eroded the American people’s trust in public health agencies.”

He said the administration’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices “remains the scientific body guiding immunization recommendations in this country, and HHS will ensure policy is based on rigorous evidence and Gold Standard Science, not the failed politics of the pandemic.”

Related Articles


Trump plans to ask Supreme Court to toss E. Jean Carroll’s $5 million abuse and defamation verdict


Epstein survivors implore Congress to act as push for disclosure builds


Utah’s congressional map must be redrawn now, judge rules


Blue states that sued kept most CDC grants, while red states feel brunt of Trump clawbacks


Podcasters and influencers: The unexpected jobs covered under Trump’s ‘no tax on tips’ plan

Public health agencies across nation start vaccine efforts

Meanwhile, public health agencies across the country have started taking steps to ensure their states have access to vaccines after U.S. regulators came out with new policies that limited access to COVID-19 shots.

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker’s health department said last week it is seeking advice from medical experts and its own Immunization Advisory Committee on COVID-19 vaccines and other immunizations for the fall respiratory season.

The health department plans to provide citizens “with specific guidance by the end of September to help Illinois health care providers and residents make informed decisions about vaccination and protecting themselves and their loved ones,” Health Director Sameer Vohra said in a statement.

New Mexico said it was updating its protocols to allow the state’s pharmacists to consider recommendations from the state’s health department when administering vaccines rather than just the federal Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.

“This order will remove obstacles to vaccination access” when it goes into effect by the end of next month, Health Secretary Gina DeBlassie said in a statement.

Last month, public officials from eight Northeast states met in Rhode Island to discuss coordinating vaccine recommendations. The group included all the New England states except for New Hampshire, as well as New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, a Democrat who has been critical of federal cuts to public health funding and restrictions on vaccines, said her state was leading the bipartisan coalition.

“We’re going to make sure that people get the vaccines they need – no matter what the Trump Administration does,” she said in a statement.

A spokesperson for the Connecticut Department of Public Health said Wednesday that cross-border meetings “are nothing new.”

“Public health challenges extend beyond state lines, making collaboration essential for effective response and prevention efforts,” the agency said in a statement. Last month’s meetings allowed the states to “share numerous public health best strategies to meet the needs of our states at a time of federal health restructuring and cuts.”

States have come together before

The West Coast Alliance isn’t the first time Democratic-led states have banded together to coordinate policies related to public health.

In the first months of the coronavirus pandemic, states formed regional alliances to gain buying power for respirators, gloves and other personal protective equipment for front-line workers and to coordinate reopening their largely shuttered economies.

Governors in the Northeast and West Coast — all but one of them Democrats — announced separate regional groups in 2020 hours after Trump said on social media that it would be his decision when to “open up the states.”

Associated Press writers Geoff Mulvihill in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, and Susan Haigh in Hartford, Connecticut, contributed to this report.