Powerball jackpot reaches $1.23B as long odds mean lots of losing, just as designed

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By SCOTT McFETRIDGE (Associated Press)

Powerball will match a record for lottery drawings Saturday night with a stretch of more than three months without a jackpot winner.

It’s that string of futility that has enabled Powerball’s top prize to reach $1.23 billion, the 8th largest in U.S. lottery history. And it’s a sign that the game is operating exactly as designed, with long odds creating a massive jackpot that entices people to drop $2 on a ticket.

It means no one should ever expect to match all six numbers and hit it rich, though it’s likely someone eventually will.

The last time someone won the Powerball jackpot was on New Year’s Day, when a player in Michigan hit an $842.4 million jackpot.

Since then, there have been 40 consecutive drawings without a jackpot winner. The 41st on Saturday night will match the record for most drawings, set twice before in 2022 and 2021.

The winless streak isn’t a fluke. Lottery officials set the odds at 1 in 292.2 million in hopes that jackpots will roll over with each of the three weekly drawings until the top prize becomes so enormous that more people take notice and play.

The odds used to be significantly better, at 1 in 175 million, but were made tougher in 2015 to create the humongous jackpots. Lottery officials at that time also made it easier to win smaller prizes, and they note that the overall odds of winning something are about 1 in 25.

It’s hard to envision what odds of 1 in 292.2 million mean.

One way is to think of the roughly 322 million people who live in spots where they can buy Powerball tickets — five states don’t participate. If each person bought one ticket, you would expect one person to win and hundreds of millions of people to lose.

Put another way, the odds of winning the jackpot are a little worse than flipping a coin and getting heads 28 straight times, according to Andrew Swift, a University of Nebraska-Omaha mathematics professor.

Of all the people who bought lottery tickets for the last drawing Wednesday night, only 22.6% of the 292.2 million possible number combinations were covered, according to the Multi-State Lottery Association. That means that 77.4% of number combinations were not covered, and it’s an indication of why people so rarely win a jackpot.

Remember, the odds of an individual ticket winning never changes, but as more people play, more number combinations will be covered and the odds of someone winning rise.

And as bad as Powerball odds are, they’re a little better than Mega Millions, the other nearly national lottery game, which has jackpot odds of 1 in 302.6 million. And, to be fair, someone won a $1.13 billion Mega Millions prize last month.

Without a doubt, the Powerball jackpot is an incredible amount of money, but it’s also less than you might expect.

That’s because while officials tout the $1.23 billion prize, that is for a sole winner who chooses to be paid through an annuity, with an immediate payment and then annual payments over 29 years. Winners almost always opt for cash, which for Saturday night’s drawing would be an estimated $595.1 million.

Regardless of the payment option, a big chunk of the winnings would go toward taxes, though that amount would vary depending on winners’ other assets and whether their state taxes lottery winnings. Just note that the top federal tax income tax rate is 37%, meaning a lot of the winnings would go to Washington.

Metro Transit expands Northstar service to Twins, Vikings games

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Metro Transit, the metro area’s regional public transit authority, pitched a couple of items this week that may be of note to transit and sports fans alike. The Northstar Commuter Rail, which travels to downtown Minneapolis from Big Lake and the northwest suburbs, will service most Minnesota Twins games at Target Field this baseball season, as well as every Minnesota Vikings game at U.S. Bank Stadium.

The full list of Twins games that will be supported by commuter rail in 2024 is online at metrotransit.org/northstar. For cost savings, groups traveling together can purchase a Northstar Roundtrip Family Pass.

In addition to the extra Northstar service, light rail trips will roll out around major concerts and when demand dictates because of large events.

The added departures are a bit of an about-face for Metro Transit, which cut back heavily on services when the pandemic hit in 2020. Northstar lost 67% of its departures and 97% of its ridership in the early days of the pandemic, and building back has been a slow climb.

Still, a new regional sales tax approved last year by state lawmakers is expected to provide a windfall for public transit. Northstar is now entirely funded by Metro Transit, freeing it from dependence on Anoka County and three other former funding partners. Northstar carried 97,000 riders last year, a 26% increase from 2022, but still nowhere near the more than 767,000 riders it carried in 2019.

State Fair Express Bus services will be announced closer to the State Fair, but Metro Transit has said the goal is to offer more buses than in 2023. Overall, Metro Transit ridership climbed 16% last year, and has shown continued growth so far this year, especially on the Green Line light rail and bus rapid transit lines.

Several bus routes are on long-term detours due to construction on Hennepin Avenue South and in downtown St. Paul. Keep in mind there’s free parking at every Northstar Station and the Metro Blue Line’s 30th Avenue and Fort Snelling stations. See MetroTransit.org for more information.

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Biden tells Israel’s Netanyahu future US support for war depends on new steps to protect civilians

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden told Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday that future U.S. support for Gaza war depends on new steps to protect civilians and aid workers.

Biden and Netanyahu spoke by phone days after Israeli airstrikes killed seven food aid workers in Gaza and added a new layer of complication in the leaders’ increasingly strained relationship.

“He made clear the need for Israel to announce and implement a series of specific, concrete, and measurable steps to address civilian harm, humanitarian suffering, and the safety of aid workers,” the White House said in a statement following the leaders call. “He made clear that U.S. policy with respect to Gaza will be determined by our assessment of Israel’s immediate action on these steps.”

Biden in the call also told Netanyahu that an “immediate ceasefire is essential” and urged Israel to reach deal “without delay,” according to the White House.

The leaders conversation comes as the World Central Kitchen, founded by restauranteur José Andrés to provide immediate food relief to disaster-stricken areas, called for an independent investigation into the Israeli strikes that killed the group’s staff members, including an American citizen.

The White House has said the U.S. has no plans to conduct its own investigation even as they called on Israel to do more to prevent the killing and wounding innocent civilians and aid workers as it carries out its operations in Gaza.

The war in Gaza began on Oct. 7, when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking around 250 people hostage. Hamas has been designated as a terrorist organization by the United States, Canada and the European Union.

Minnesota teen sets goal to see every total solar eclipse through the year 2099

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CLOQUET — On Monday, April 8, the moon’s shadow will extend across North America from Mazatlan, Mexico, to Newfoundland, Canada.

In the little town of Broken Bow, Oklahoma, the total solar eclipse will achieve peak totality — when the moon completely blocks the sun and reveals the star’s outer atmosphere, the corona — at 1:45 p.m. This will mark the second of eight total solar eclipses that Cloquet teen Kenadie Mickle plans to witness in her lifetime.

Days before departing for Broken Bow, Mickle, 14, looks over a list of every total solar eclipse that will be visible in the contiguous United States during her lifetime. The list concludes Sept. 14, 2099, when the moon’s shadow will cover Cambridge, Minnesota. Mickle will be 89 years old.

“It’s weird that I’ll still be alive by then,” Mickle said.

The timeline, titled “Kenadie’s ‘See ‘em’ all’ 21st Century Total Eclipse Schedule,” assembled by her father, David Mickle, will serve as a roadmap for Kenadie in her pursuit to view every total solar eclipse in the lower 48 states. It lists the date of every total solar eclipse, how old Kenadie will be and where to view it.

Though it is far from Kenadie’s last, Monday’s solar eclipse is certain to be one of the most memorable.

David and Kenadie Mickle, of Cloquet, demonstrate how they will look wearing their safety goggles during the Aug. 21, 2017, eclipse, which they viewed in Marshall, Mo. (Jamie Lund / File / Duluth Media Group)

For 4 minutes, 16 seconds, Broken Bow will be shadowed in complete darkness as the moon eclipses the sun. This will nearly double the totality of Kenadie’s first solar eclipse in 2017 in Marshall, Missouri, which lasted 2 minutes, 41 seconds.

“The duration of the totality is going to be what’s the best part,” David said, “because it’s going to be longer than someone can hold their breath before they die.”

Not only will the sun be totally eclipsed, but the “devil comet,” which derives its nickname from its hornlike appearance, will be making its 71-year-passage across the sky at roughly the same time as the eclipse and could be made visible to the naked eye in the daytime twilight brought on by the eclipse, according to Astronomy Magazine.

Moreover, the sun will be near its solar maximum, giving its magnetic field the appearance of a “tangled hairball,” NASA reported. Streamers — cap-like structures with long pointed peaks — and prominences — bright features extending from the sun’s surface — will likely be visible throughout the corona.

“It is a heck of a sight to see, is what it is,” David said.

Kenadie credits her ambitious goal to her father, who was inspired by his father, “a self-professed astronomy enthusiast,” David said.

Kenadie and David will travel to Broken Bow with Kenadie’s mother and David’s wife, Denise Mickle, and family friends Scott and Beth Emilson and their children, Hendrix Wilkinson, 14, Aili Wilkinson, 13, and Charlie Mayo, 7.

The two families will depart Thursday, April 4, and are expected to arrive in Oklahoma on Saturday, April 6, leaving themselves extra time if the weather appears like it could inhibit viewing the eclipse and they need to reroute.

This will be the Emilson family’s first time viewing a total solar eclipse.

“Expectations for me are zero because I’ve never seen one,” Scott said.

Though Kenadie plans to see as many solar eclipses as possible, the astronomical rarity of the event isn’t lost on Hendrix.

“I’m just having a good time and also seeing something that really anyone won’t ever see again in their lifetime,” he said.

This will be the last total solar eclipse Kenadie will see until she is 34 years old and the moon’s shadow will pass over Medora, North Dakota, on Aug. 23, 2044.

However, the eclipse Kenadie anticipates the most will be when she is 35 years old, on Aug. 12, 2045, when a total eclipse will engulf Port St. Lucie, Florida.

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