After rainy week, Twin Cities could see first snowfall of season on Saturday

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After a rainy work week in the Twin Cities, the metro might see its first snowfall of the season this weekend.

Tuesday’s record-breaking showers — which dumped 1.34 inches at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport — gave way to an overcast Wednesday, and a second round of heavy rainfall was expected to begin late Wednesday night and continue off-and-on into Friday, according to the National Weather Service.

Light snow is possible Saturday, said Joe Strus, a weather service meteorologist in Chanhassen. But don’t expect to be building any snowmen just yet.

“Flurries to snow showers, somewhere within that realm,” he said. “We’re not looking at major accumulation.”

Another dusting is possible on Halloween, but it could just as easily fall as rain if temperatures don’t dip low enough.

“It definitely bears watching,” Strus said, adding that he’s not expecting a major winter weather event either way.

That isn’t the case this week in much of North Dakota, where a winter storm warning has been posted until Friday afternoon. Forecasters expect 6 to 9 inches of snow driven by winds gusting to 40 mph. Far northwestern Minnesota could pick up 3 to 6 inches of snow.

Temperatures are expected to cool in general this weekend into next week. Saturday morning could finally bring the first fall freeze in the Twin Cities. Lows in the upper 20s are expected. Minneapolis-St. Paul typically see the first freeze between Oct. 1-10.

In advance of the additional precipitation, the weather service is reminding people to clear their neighborhood storm drains of leaves and other debris. The public can “adopt” storm drains at adopt-a-drain.org.

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UAW-Ford tentative deal could relieve some pressure on Biden

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A tentative agreement announced Wednesday between union autoworkers and Ford was welcome news to the White House and could be a sign that at least one of the problems on President Joe Biden’s plate could be nearing resolution.

Several hurdles remain to a settlement of the United Auto Workers’ strike against the Big Three, including whether workers at Ford would ratify an agreement and, if so, whether its terms can be extended to General Motors and Stellantis. The transition to electric vehicles has also been a major sticking point, with the UAW fearing a loss of jobs to non-union plants.

But it is the first major breakthrough in a strike that appeared to be digging in for the long haul.

A wider deal would come as a relief to the White House and Democrats representing car-producing regions, who had supported the workers’ demands even though some feared that an extended strike could harm the economy, sour public sentiment and hamstring their electoral prospects in 2024.

The White House was quick to applaud the development.

“This tentative agreement is a testament to the power of employers and employees coming together to work out their differences at the bargaining table in a manner that helps businesses succeed while helping workers secure pay and benefits they can raise a family on and retire with dignity and respect,” Biden said in a statement.

If the deal sticks, and similar agreements are struck with the other companies, it would be one of the organized labor’s biggest victories in a year of worker unrest across the country.

“We won things nobody thought possible,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in a statement. “Since the strike began, Ford put 50% more on the table than when we walked out. This agreement sets us on a new path to make things right at Ford, at the Big Three, and across the auto industry. Together, we are turning the tide for the working class in this country.”

The agreement announced Wednesday includes a 25 percent wage increase for workers across the course of the four-year contract. The union had initially demanded a 40 percent increase, while the companies’ initial offers were in the single digits.

The tentative agreement also significantly boosts the starting pay for new employees and accelerates the rate at which they escalate to the highest wage tier, shaving off several years from the previous schedule. It also reinstates a cost-of-living adjustment that was done away with more than a decade ago amid the American auto industry’s financial struggles.

UAW also said it won the ability to strike in the event of future plant closures.

Fain has been expanding the strike on a piecemeal basis since the strike began Sept. 15. In total, more than 45,000 workers have walked out of 46 facilities in 22 states.

Workers most recently walked out of GM and Stellantis facilities, as Fain said the companies had fallen behind Ford’s offer.

The tentative agreement will go next to the union’s members for ratification.

The UAW said Ford workers would return to work during the ratification process but the strikes would continue at GM and Stellantis.

Ford has laid off the most workers of the three companies — 3,167 as of Wednesday — citing downstream effects of the strike. Between those employees and the striking workers, nearly 20,000 people have been off the job at Ford plants since the walkouts began.

Ford CEO and President Jim Farley said he was “pleased to have reached a tentative agreement” and “focused on restarting Kentucky Truck Plant, Michigan Assembly Plant and Chicago Assembly Plant, calling 20,000 Ford employees back to work and shipping our full lineup to our customers again.”

GM on Tuesday said the strike has cost it $800 million up to that point. Thousands of workers across the constellation of suppliers affiliated with the Big Three have also been affected by the weekslong strikes.

The electric vehicle transition has loomed over the negotiations, as it represents a turning point for both the industry and the union, which doesn’t have as strong of a foothold in EV facilities as traditional plants.

GM earlier in October agreed to include workers at its battery plants in its master labor agreement with the union, a major win for UAW.

St. Paul man sentenced for killing girlfriend’s friend during domestic assault

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A St. Paul man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for fatally shooting a friend of his girlfriend on the city’s North End nearly three years ago.

Glenn Lee Burton, 42, admitted to assaulting his girlfriend and then shooting 56-year-old Todd Anthony Gerleman in the face at point-blank range on Dec. 21, 2020. Gerleman, of South St. Paul, died at the scene.

Ramsey County prosecutors charged Burton with second-degree intentional murder and attempted murder. An August plea agreement reduced charges to second-degree unintentional murder and second-degree assault. It also called for the 240-month sentence, which he received last week. Burton will receive credit for just over two years and 10 months he’s already served in custody.

He was civilly committed as mentally ill and dangerous in April 2021 and found incompetent to stand trial. He was deemed competent for court proceedings this February.

Todd Gerleman (Courtesy photo)

Gerleman was a former TV sportscaster working as a licensed mortgage banker. Originally from Iowa, he graduated from the University of Northern Iowa with a degree in broadcast journalism and worked for 10 years as a sportscaster for three Iowa TV stations, a work biography about him says.

‘Prince Charming’ turned abusive

According to the criminal complaint, a 29-year-old woman told police she’d been dating Burton for about two weeks and he was “Prince Charming” at first, but things changed and he “became very possessive and physically abusive.”

On the night of the shooting, the woman went to her residence with Gerleman, where she was meeting other friends to repair damage that Burton had done. She saw Burton’s car was there and they left.

The woman and Gerleman drove to Burton’s mother’s home on West Larpenteur Avenue, near Rice Street. She asked Burton’s mom to call her son and get him to leave her house, saying she would otherwise have to call the police because he’d already broken into her house two or three times.

The woman was walking up the driveway when she heard Burton pull up. He ran at her, pulled her toward his car, yanked her hair and punched her multiple times.

She said she tried to get away from Burton and back into the driver’s seat of Gerleman’s car, but Burton ripped off her wig and pinned her neck to a doorframe until she had trouble breathing and saw stars.

When she was able to get in the driver’s seat, Burton looked into the car and demanded to know who Gerleman was. Gerleman told Burton he was the woman’s friend, after which Burton shouted at the woman, “(Y)ou ain’t gonna escape me — I own you!” the complaint said.

Glenn Lee Burton (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

She begged Burton to stop and tried to close the car door, but Burton pointed a handgun at her and pulled the trigger. She felt something pass by her face, and then Gerleman screamed he’d been shot and clutched his arm.

She put the car in reverse and stomped on the gas, but Burton went around to the open passenger door, stuck the gun in Gerleman’s face and pulled the trigger.

Her cell phone wasn’t working, so she drove to a nearby gas station on East Larpenteur Avenue, just off Interstate 35E, for help. Officers responded to the Arco station and found her crying hysterically, with blood on her clothing and hands. Paramedics pronounced Gerleman dead.

Police arrested Burton after finding him at a Roseville home in the 1600 block of North Chatsworth Avenue. Officers recovered a handgun from a bedroom.

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Chicago Bears QB Tyson Bagent is confident executing the game plan in his 2nd start: ‘I don’t want to put any limits’

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The nerves are still there for Tyson Bagent this week.

But that’s a normal part of the process for the Chicago Bears undrafted rookie, not an exception as he prepares to make his second NFL start Sunday against the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium.

Bagent always has what he calls “nerved-up” energy flowing through him during game weeks when he’s off the field, a product of homing in on the details of what he needs to learn ahead of a practice or a game. When he gets on the field, that melts away into the confidence that has impressed teammates.

“On my way home from the facility, I’m just kind of thinking about what I need to study tonight,” Bagent said. “And I just am kind of eager to get it done and learned and my mind wrapped around it, so I’m able to go the next day.”

It’s understandable if Bagent is charged up this week as he transitions from earning a win in his first NFL start against the Las Vegas Raiders to preparing to play on national television Sunday night against the Chargers.

Bagent garnered a lot of attention with his story of playing at Division II Shepherd in West Virginia to starting in place of injured quarterback Justin Fields on Sunday. He completed 21 of 29 passes for 162 yards, one touchdown, no turnovers and one sack to help the Bears earn just their fifth victory in the last two seasons.

He was on the phone with someone from Huntington, W.Va., on Tuesday, who informed him that according to research, Bagent is the first born-and-bred West Virginia quarterback to start in the NFL. Bagent called it “amazing.”

“You just think about how long they’ve been playing in the NFL, how many people have gone through the NFL,” Bagent said. “So when you can still be the first to do something in this league that’s been around so long and had so many people come through it, it’s definitely an honor and something that’s really crazy and wild to think about.”

The attention is about to get bigger this week.

Fields is expected to be sidelined again as he recovers from his right thumb injury. That leaves the Bears to try to build on what Bagent did against the Raiders facing a Chargers defense that boasts what Bagent called “generational players” in outside linebacker Khalil Mack and safety Derwin James.

The Bears asked Bagent to execute a conservative game plan against the Raiders, relying on the running game and short passes. But Bagent doesn’t feel like he is boxed into such a plan, saying he’d be confident in whatever the Bears called, including more vertical passes.

“Whatever I’m asked to do from the coaches is what we’ll get done and what will happen,” he said. “So I don’t want to put any limits anywhere.”

His Bears teammates expect to see that confidence again from him this week.

“He’s just got this cool kind of swagger about him,” wide receiver DJ Moore said. “When he comes in the huddle, he’s confident, loud and makes everybody feel like, ‘OK, we’ve got a chance to go execute on this play.’ And he does that every time he steps in the huddle. Every play was pretty good last week with him, and I’m looking forward to seeing him do it again this week.”

D’Onta Foreman wins awards

Running back D’Onta Foreman carried a scepter into the Bears locker room Wednesday afternoon after winning the NFL Network’s “Good Morning Football” award for “Angry Runs” for his performance against the Raiders.

Foreman was also voted by fans as the FedEx Ground NFL player of the week for his performance, which included 16 carries for 89 yards and two touchdowns and three catches for 31 yards and a touchdown.

“I definitely do think my physicality brings energy to the team,” he said. “They kind of feed off my energy when I’m going out there and doing what I do. I just want to focus on getting better each week.”

The awards came after Foreman was inactive for four weeks earlier this season because Khalil Herbert and Roschon Johnson pushed him out of the game-day roster mix. Johnson returned to practice in full Wednesday after he was out for two weeks with a concussion. But Herbert is still out with an ankle injury.

“There are a lot of other great running backs and a lot of good competition,” Foreman said. “I take nothing away from those guys. They push me each and every day to continue to excel and get better and better. It’s part of how it goes. I’ve been on three different teams, so I’ve had to prove myself to three different organizations. When I get my opportunity to do so, I feel like I handle myself and carry myself in a way that they believe and trust in me. I just want to continue to grow and build on that.”

Injury report

The Bears designated left tackle Braxton Jones to return from injured reserve after he missed five games with a neck injury. Jones was limited in practice and has 21 days to return to the active roster.

Coach Matt Eberflus said the Bears are looking at Jones’ functionality and conditioning as they determine whether he can return this week.

The Bears also designated defensive lineman Khalid Kareem (hip) to return.

Fields, right tackle Darnell Wright (shoulder/toe), safety Jaquan Brisker (illness), cornerback Terell Smith (mononucleosis) and guard Nate Davis (ankle) didn’t practice Wednesday.

Safety Eddie Jackson (foot) and offensive lineman Dan Feeney (knee) were limited.

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