Climate action group schedules first Ward 4 candidate forum for Tuesday

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Voters in St. Paul’s Ward 4 neighborhoods will choose a new city council member in a special election this August, and the first candidate forum of the campaign season will be held from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at Hamline Methodist Church.

The forum, organized by the St. Paul chapter of Unidos Minnesota, a climate action and economic and social justice organization, has invited the three declared candidates to participate. They are nonprofit founder Molly Coleman, former Hamline-Midway Coalition president Cole Hanson and school board member Chauntyll Allen.

Candidates will be given the opportunity to respond to five questions, prepared in advance, on “climate resilience.”

“This year the city council will make big decisions about funding for home upgrades that lower energy bills, negotiating a new contract with our utility company and revising St. Paul’s Climate Action and Resilience Plan,” reads a statement from Unidos St. Paul, which raises concern about “rising energy costs, unaffordable homeowner’s insurance and unhealthy air quality.”

Hamline Methodist Church is located at 1514 Englewood Ave. in St. Paul. Attendees are asked to RSVP in advance at tinyurl.com/UnidosForum2025.

Ward 4 has five neighborhoods — Hamline-Midway, Merriam Park, St. Anthony Park and parts of Macalester-Groveland and Como. Former Ward 4 Council Member Mitra Jalali stepped down from office in February, citing health concerns, and interim Council Member Matt Privratsky was recently appointed by the mayor’s office to fill her role until voters elect a new member to complete the four-year term, which ends in 2028.

The Ward 4 filing period opened Tuesday and runs through June 2. The special election, which will be decided by ranked choice, is Aug. 12.

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No, the Frost don’t feel great about being down 1-0 in PWHL Finals

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It’s easy to explain why maybe the Frost have lost the first game of all four of their PWHL playoff series. Because Minnesota had to scramble late to make the postseason, they never had a top seed.

“We started all these series on the road,” head coach Ken Klee pointed out Wednesday. “It’s very hard to win on the road.”

Klee’s teams have so far rallied to win three of those series, beating Toronto in four games in the first round this season after winning the PWHL’s inaugural Walter Cup in 2024.

Right now, though, they’re just down 1-0 after a 2-1 overtime loss on Tuesday at TD Center. Game 2 of the five-game series is Thursday night. Puck drop is set for 6 p.m.

“Our group knows we’re a resilient group,” Klee told reporters on a media call Wednesday. “We came here to try to win one game, and that’s what we’re going to focus on.”

On Phire

Ottawa rookie Gwyneth Phillips continued her torrid postseason on Tuesday, stopping 25 of 26 shots from Minnesota to improve to 4-0-1 with a 1.11 goals-against average and .957 save percentage in the playoffs.

The only goal Phillips allowed on Tuesday came in the third period after she played a puck outside the crease. A backhander by Klára Hymlárová hit the back of the net before Phillips could slide back into position.

Phillips was ready for everything else. That has to change, said Klee, and not just by charging the net and pouncing on rebounds.

“To me, it’s not always about how accurate you shoot but how quick,” he said. “Because goalies are so foundationally solid, when you give them a clear look at the puck, it’s hard to score. We need to get pucks a little quicker on net.”

On the other end, the Charge put only 19 shots on Nicole Hensley, who has been splitting time in net with Maddie Rooney. Klee did not commit Wednesday to a goalie for Thursday night.

“We’re just meeting as a staff now,” he said. “We kind of all just watched the game this morning, and this afternoon we’ll get together with the team and we’ll make all those determinations.”

Mrázová questionable

Charge coach Carla MacLeod said forward Kateřina Mrázová is questionable after getting the bad end of a couple of collisions in Game 1, including a knee-on-knee hit from Britta Curl-Salemme.

“She’s just working with our medical team today to assess everything that transpired in those two hits,” MacLeod said. “As always, it’s just day to day at this point. … She’s still in the assessment phase.”

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Here’s what to expect at the Army’s 250th anniversary parade on Trump’s birthday

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By TARA COPP

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Army on Wednesday started loading up some of the tanks that will take to the streets of the nation’s capital during the 250th anniversary celebration of the service next month, which will feature hundreds of military vehicles and aircraft and thousands of soldiers.

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The event has grown extensively in scope and size since Army planners started working on a festival two years ago to mark the day and have now added a military parade — which President Donald Trump had unsuccessfully tried to do during his first term.

The Army’s anniversary celebration is set for June 14, which also happens to be Trump’s birthday.

It will include concerts, fireworks, NFL players, fitness competitions and displays all over the National Mall for daylong festivities. The Army expects as many as 200,000 people could attend and that putting on the celebration will cost an estimated $25 million to $45 million.

Here’s what to expect during the all-day festival and 6 p.m. parade:

The tanks and armored vehicles

The Army was putting 28 M1 Abrams main battle tanks onto rail cars at Fort Cavazos in Texas on Wednesday. The tanks weigh more than 60 tons apiece and will take about nine or 10 days to travel by rail to Maryland, where they will be loaded onto trucks to be driven into Washington, D.C. and offloaded at a staging area near the Lincoln Memorial.

On the day of the parade, those tanks as well as 28 tracked Bradley Fighting Vehicles, 28 wheeled Stryker combat vehicles, four tracked M-109 Paladin self-propelled howitzers and other towed artillery will maneuver to the start of the parade route just off the National Mall. They will travel toward the White House, driving over thick metal plating to protect the streets at some parade points where the vehicles make a sharp turn.

The Army said it’s also planning some additional asphalt work and putting new rubber padding on the tanks’ metal tracks to try to minimize street damage.

The influx of soldiers

More than 6,700 soldiers will travel from bases around the country to participate in the parade and festival and spend June 11-15 housed in two nearby federal buildings, sleeping on cots and having packaged military meals ready-to-eat, or MREs, for breakfast and lunch.

They will get a hot meal for dinner and a $69 per diem to buy additional food as they want, Army spokesman Steve Warren said.

They will be forming units that represent each of the nation’s major conflicts, starting with the Revolutionary War. For each conflict, 60 soldiers will wear period uniforms supplied by an event company representing that war and be followed by 400 soldiers from their same base in present-day uniforms.

Not all of the soldiers participating will be in the parade — or even on the ground. For instance, Col. Anne McClain, an Army astronaut currently serving on the International Space Station, will participate.

At the end of the parade, the Army’s Golden Knights parachute team will jump over the White House, landing near Trump to present him with a folded flag, and 250 new recruits or reenlisting service members will be sworn in to the Army by Trump.

The aircraft and helicopters buzzing overhead

More than 50 helicopters and aircraft representing different wars will fly over the city — pairing up with the units on the ground as they pass the president.

For example, as units marching in World War II uniforms pass Trump, a P-51 Mustang fighter aircraft and a B-25 Mitchell bomber aircraft are expected to fly overhead.

As units representing more recent conflicts pass, Army H-1 Huey, AH-1 Cobra, AH-64 Apache and CH-47 Chinook helicopters will appear in the sky.

The helicopters are flying at a time when sharing D.C.’s airspace is still a sensitive issue after a January collision between an Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines regional jet killed 67.

Warren said the Army has worked closely with the Federal Aviation Administration on routes, and the helicopters will take off from Andrews Air Force Base to fly toward the Capitol.

It’s likely D.C.’s airspace may be temporarily closed to airline traffic as the sky parade occurs, the Army said.

Lawyer says worker accused of helping New Orleans jailbreak was unclogging toilet, not aiding escape

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By JACK BROOK

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A worker charged with aiding the New Orleans jailbreak by 10 prisoners shut off water to unclog a toilet, not to allow the men to cut the pipe to create an opening for their escape, the employee’s lawyer told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

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Sterling Williams, a 33-year-old maintenance worker at the jail, was arrested Tuesday in connection with the jailbreak.

Authorities previously said that Williams had been instructed by one of the inmates to turn off the water to a toilet. Behind the toilet was a hole that 10 men slipped through in Friday’s escape.

“It would seem obvious to me that filling up the toilet, clogging the toilet, was a portion of the escapee’s plan,” attorney Michael Kennedy said. “They would know that whoever the maintenance person was would have to turn off the water … because it was overflowing into the tier.”

Williams told law enforcement during an interview that an inmate had threatened to “shank” him if he did not turn off the water, authorities said.

This undated photo released by the Louisiana Attorney General’s Office shows Sterling Williams. (Louisiana Attorney General’s Office via AP)

Williams had plenty of opportunity to not only report the threat but also the escape plan, authorities said. They asserted that because Williams turned the water off, the inmates were “able to successfully make good” on their escape.