Though growth is slowing down, the industry remains a strong driver of the city's economy.
The Gophers and Badgers men's basketball teams will start five players combined from Minnesota in Wednesday's game at the Barn. That adds fuel to the Border Battle rivalry.
The new top Democrat in the Minnesota Senate said Wednesday that she's committed to making sure "that every voice has a place at the table" as she works to unify her caucus ahead of the 2020 legislative session and the November elections.
And let's not give an unrepresentative state so much power.
A bill calls for an independent assessment of public safety on the LRT lines.
The question of whether to remove President Donald Trump from office is reasonable, but with the overwhelming evidence, the question of his guilt is not.
Our elections must be kept sacrosanct.
On Feb. 21, a new rule bans immigration from four additional countries.
If future observers see that the senators redefined impeachment, that will profoundly weaken the U.S. constitutional system.
Ban would harm economy, mining advocates say, while supporters argue that environmental risks are too great.
Council members agreed they want a sales tax, but some said they're not ready to ask for state support.
It may be the latest trend in beer, but it goes back to the late 19th century.
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers signed a Republican-authored bill Wednesday that imposes new restrictions on firefighting foam to curb pollution from PFAS chemcials.
Richardson Nature Center's annual ice harvest recalls a time when gathering ice cubes involved as much work as farming a crop.
Most Minnesotans take pride in their ability to cope with, or even embrace, cold weather. But what did surviving extreme temperatures look like for the state's first settlers? Host Eric Roper talks with reporter Mara Klecker about ways settlers survived.
Authorities allege that David Kruchten hid cameras in two air freshener cans and one smoke detector.
It's one of several proposals lawmakers will consider during the 2020 legislative session.
Impeachment process put spotlight on the nation's gaping divide, and the Constitution.
Almost three dozen big companies and more than 100 small businesses in Tennessee on Wednesday predicted economic backlash from a newly enacted state adoption law and other proposals that target LGBT people, with one company saying plans to add jobs in Nashville are "in doubt" over the legislation.
The former operators of a failed multi-state nursing home chain stole more than $2 million from employees' paychecks that was supposed to pay for their health insurance, according to a lawsuit.
Even by recent Washington standards, it's been an extraordinary week of news. Hear the "Playing Politics" analysis from WCCO Radio's Chad Hartman and the Star Tribune Editorial Board's John Rash and D. J. Tice.