Largest northeastern Minnesota wildfire ‘related to a human cause’

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The largest of the three wildfires burning in northeastern Minnesota was likely caused by people.

In an update Wednesday,  the U.S. Forest Service’s Eastern Area Incident Management Team said the initial investigation into the nearly 17,000-acre Jenkins Creek Fire, which started May 12, shows “the fire is related to a human cause.” The update offered no other details but said the investigation is ongoing. The fire southeast of Hoyt Lakes was rated as 13% contained.

The causes of the 12,000-acre Camp House Fire and 1,259-acre Munger Shaw Fire remain “undetermined,” according to the Wildfire Incident Information System. The Camp House blaze broke out May 11 near Brimson and the Munger Shaw started May 12 near Cotton.

Meanwhile, several evacuation orders are being lifted.

In St. Louis County, 13 evacuation zones in “go” status were improved to “set” status Tuesday, the sheriff’s office reported on Facebook.

St. Louis County Highway 33 and County Road 110/Forest Highway 11 also reopened to traffic at 8 a.m. Wednesday.

“Property owners are urged to take extra caution in the area,” the sheriff’s office said in a Facebook post Tuesday night. “Be aware that the burned areas may still show smoke from various stumps and debris — this is not of concern when inside the already burned area. However, if smoke or flames are found outside the already burned area or anywhere it is clearly a hazard, please call 911.”

In Lake County, the only active evacuation zone remaining is the Murphy Lake Road area, Matt Pollmann, the county’s emergency management director, said in a Facebook video Tuesday night.

“Containment is over 40%, so they are feeling confident with the Camp House Fire,” he said.

Significant progress was made in containing the perimeter of the Camp House Fire to 73%, the Eastern Area Complex Incident Management Team reported Wednesday morning.

Cooler, wetter weather has helped firefighters. The blazes started during a period of critical wildfire weather.

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White Earth cannabis compact signed, clearing way for Moorhead dispensary

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Gov. Tim Walz signed a compact Tuesday that outlines how the state of Minnesota and the White Earth Nation will work together to regulate the sale of cannabis.

The agreement clears the way for White Earth’s cannabis products company Waabigwan Mashkiki to open an off-reservation dispensary for cannabis products in Moorhead, which could happen as soon as this weekend.

That’s according to Zach Wilson, CEO of Waabigwan Mashkiki, which means medicine flower in Ojibwe.

“We are essentially able to go live statewide,” Wilson said Tuesday after the signing of the compact was announced.

In addition to Moorhead, the tribe said it would be opening a dispensary in St. Cloud as well.

The compact Walz signed was the first tribal-state compact authorized under Minnesota’s 2023 cannabis law.

The agreement outlines how the state and tribe will promote a cooperative and mutually beneficial relationship to regulate cannabis and promote public health and safety.

Items the dispensary is expected to sell include cannabis flower — the smokable buds plucked from a flowering marijuana plant — and pre-rolled cannabis cigarettes.

In setting up the dispensary, the tribe installed extraction equipment that will take cannabis biomass and turn it into CBD oils, tinctures and other desired cannabis compounds. Some of those compounds can be used to make cannabis gummies, cannabis distillates for vaping cartridges and live resins.

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Lynx beat Wings, spoiling Paige Bueckers’ hometown return

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Napheesa Collier scored 28 points, including four clutch free throws late in the final minute, and the Minnesota Lynx held off the Dallas Wings 85-81 on Wednesday.

Courtney Williams and Alanna Smith each added 13 points in front of a home opener crowd of 12,772 after the Lynx beat Dallas 99-84 in the opener for both teams on Friday.

For the third straight game, Minnesota (3-0) had 27 assists. Just one Minnesota basket did not come with a helper. The Lynx shot 47.5% from the field after combining for 50.4% in its first two wins.

Arike Ogunbowale led 0-3 Dallas with 21 points. Paige Bueckers, the former Hopkins High School standout and top pick in this year’s WNBA Draft, had 12 on 3-of-11 shooting.

Routinely up by eight or nine points in the second and third quarters, the Lynx could not put away the Wings.

Minnesota led by a game-high 11 points, 63-52, with less than three minutes to play in the third quarter, but Dallas cut the lead to 76-73 on a 3-pointers by Ogunbowale and DiJonai Carrington with 3:41 left in the fourth.

Minnesota missed six of its first eight shots and four of its first six free throws in the frame.

But Williams made a long jumper, Smith had a block, Williams added a pair of free throws, and Natisha Hiedeman one for an 81-73 Lynx lead with 1:32 left.

A 3-point play by Myisha Hines-Allen got the Wings within five. The Lynx committed a 5-second violation on the inbounds play, and Hines-Allen made two free throws with 1:15 left.

Minnesota committed 19 turnovers.

Collier pushed the lead back to five with a couple free throws, but a 3 from Ogunbowale made it a two-point game with 39 seconds left.

Williams grabbed an offensive rebound, Collier made two free throws with 17.5 seconds left and the Lynx could exhale.

Down 15-5 early, coach Cheryl Reeve called the first Lynx timeout. Perhaps a well-timed wake-up call because the Lynx took over at both ends of the court, outscoring the Wings 16-3 over the final six minutes of the quarter for a 21-18 lead. Dallas made six of its first seven shots, but only one of its next 12.

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Mizutani: Paige Bueckers fulfills prophecy with Minnesota homecoming against Lynx

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The home opener for the Lynx on Wednesday night at Target Center was briefly overshadowed by a homecoming for Minnesota native Paige Bueckers.

She garnered a very loud cheer during player introductions for the Dallas Wings before the Lynx ran out of the tunnel.

It was the realization of a lifelong dream for Bueckers, the former star for Hopkins High School, who took her talents to the University of Connecticut before eventually being selected by the Wings with the No. 1 pick in the 2025 WNBA draft.

Not that anybody is surprised that Buckers made it to the highest level.

It was pretty clear from a young age that she was destined for greatness.

Here are some stories from those that got to see Bueckers up close and personal during her rise up the ranks.

‘She was like a child prodigy’

Maybe the most viral story about Bueckers to date came courtesy of KARE 11 photojournalist Gary Knox. His daughter Evelyn was playing varsity for Hopkins when he attended an open gym on Sept. 24, 2013.

“I remember a few of the parents came up to me asking if I had seen the sixth grader tearing it up,” Knox said. “I walked over to the other court and she like was a child prodigy out there. It was like a little kid playing Mozart on the piano. You’re like, ‘They shouldn’t be playing this well.’”

That was the first time Knox had ever seen Bueckers. He noticed how dominate she was despite being among the smallest players on the floor. She made up for her lack of size and strength with her skill and swagger.

“She was a few steps ahead of everybody else,” Knox said. “She was just different.”

It was enough that Knox wanted to document it. He ran a website on the side highlighting different girls basketball players across Minnesota and figured people might want to know about this rising star.

“I went up to her dad and asked permission to tweet about her,” Knox said. “The rest is history.”

The tweet proved to be prophetic, as Knox told people to remember the name, going as far as comparing Bueckers to the GOAT Diana Taurasi.

It has been retweeted more than 10,000 times, going viral a number of times when Bueckers was playing at UConn, then again last month before she was selected by the Wings with the No. 1 pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft.

‘She set the standard for everybody else’

Not many people on the planet have spent more time with Bueckers than her longtime AAU coach Tara Starks. They started working together for the first time when Bueckers was 10 years old and they have remained in each other’s lives ever since.

“You could tell right away she was special,” Starks said. “It actually took me a little bit to realize she was playing up for her age. She was younger than all the kids she was playing against. That made it that much more impressive when I realized that.”

Most kids that age are singularly focused with getting to the basket. That wasn’t the case for Bueckers. Not in the slightest.

“She was so unselfish,” Starks said. “She liked to pass the ball. She had the ability to get anywhere on the court and get her teammates good looks. She did a lot that kids at that age don’t normally do.”

That unselfishness has served as a compass for Bueckers as she has continued to progress throughout her career. Though she could dominate the game with her scoring, she always took an immense amount of pride in getting her teammates involved.

Asked about some of the other character traits that stood out, Starks pointed to how committed Bueckers is to her craft.

“We would have open gym at 6 p.m.,” Starks said. “I would pick her up from Lifetime Fitness around the corner from her house, then, if we got done early enough, I would drop her back off and she would keep working.”

That commitment from Bueckers has left a lasting impact that has continued long after she has moved on.

“She created this mentality,” Starks said. “You’ve seen a lot of kids around here, like, ‘I want to be better than Paige.’ They are putting in a lot of hours because that’s what she used to do. She set the standard for everybody else.”

‘She’s so good for the game’

The first time that former Wayzata girls basketball coach Mike Schumacher scouted Bueckers still sticks out to him more than a decade later. She was playing varsity as an eighth grader for Hopkins at the time and he knew he was going to have his hands full for the foreseeable future.

“She was coming off the bench and I was sitting next to another coach and I said, ‘They are better when Paige is on the floor,’” Schumacher said. “She was the driving force for them even at that age and everybody knew it.”

The game plan anytime Wayzata played Hopkins started and stopped with Bueckers.

“We had to figure out what we wanted to take away,” Schumacher said. “If we didn’t worry about her scoring, she would kill us by herself. If we worried too much about her scoring, she would kill us by getting the ball to her teammates.”

As talented as Wayzata was in the mid to late 2010s, it never made the state tournament because, well, Bueckers always made sure Hopkins won the section championship.

“I became a fan of hers once she got to UConn,” Schumacher said with a laugh. “It took a little bit of time. She’s so good for the game. She always has been.”

‘She was something special’

As he went down memory lane this week, Hopkins girls basketball coach Brian Cosgriff admitted Bueckers was good enough to play varsity as a seventh grader. She instead played junior varsity and led that group to an undefeated record.

The following year Bueckers played varsity an eighth grader and immediately made her presence felt.

“I remember we were playing Elk River pretty early on and she came off the bench and hit like eight 3-pointers,” Cosgriff said. “That’s when I knew she was something special.”

As she continued to develop her game, Cosgriff actually had to convince Bueckers to be more selfish at times.

“She loves her teammates more than anything,” Cosgriff said. “If I ever had to yell at her, it was because she didn’t shoot enough.”

After winning a state championship as a junior, Bueckers was in position to win in another state championship as a senior. She never got the chance. On the eve of the state championship game between Hopkins and Farmington, the Minnesota State High School League cancelled all activities in response to COVID-19.

“We weren’t going to lose that game,” Cosgriff said. “I know Paige well enough to know she wasn’t going to let us lose that game.”

As much success as they experienced together, there’s a particular moment that stands out to Cosgriff when he thinks about Bueckers and her journey to get to this point. He remembers when she was a senior, she got invited to a Timberwolves game. She was honored during a break in the action.

“I thought to myself, ‘How cool would it be to see her play against the Lynx on this floor?’” Cosgriff said. “Sure enough, she made it happen, and I couldn’t be more proud of her.”

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