Category: News

  • We can save rural, but we can’t stop change

    We can save rural, but we can’t stop change

    A controversial news analysis from the NY Times asks whether rural America can be saved.

  • Duluth tall ships tickets go on sale today

    Duluth tall ships tickets go on sale today

    Fans of tall masted wooden ships will feel an aft wind this summer when the Festival of Sail comes to Duluth, Minnesota, Aug. 11-13. Formerly known as the Tall Ships Festival, tickets for the event go on sale today. It’s hard to explain the absolute crush of people who come to Canal Park and Bayfront…

  • Why livability is key to Northern Minnesota strategy

    Why livability is key to Northern Minnesota strategy

    The Iron Range, all of Northern Minnesota, and most of rural America share many problems, while maintaining some unique ones. Nevertheless, we could all make good use of one potential solution: We need people. Our small towns and rural institutions were built for a certain number of people. Not a ton of people, but a…

  • Northern Minnesota wolves maintain clear boundaries

    Northern Minnesota wolves maintain clear boundaries

    Scientists with the Voyageurs Wolf Project study the behavior of wolves in Northern Minnesota’s Voyageurs National Park. One recent social media post shows how wolves maintain their territory. As you see above, collared wolves from different packs move a great deal in pursuit of prey. But they almost never encroach on the territory of neighboring…

  • Prominent indy TV festival coming to Duluth

    Prominent indy TV festival coming to Duluth

    Next October Duluth will host the Independent TV Festival. This gathering of independent television producers, directors and writers routinely connects major TV and streaming distributors with new projects. On Monday, the ITV Festival announced it would move from Vermont to Northern Minnesota. It’s a major coup for the arts scene in our region. The Oct…

  • Driving culture impacts Minnesota’s carbon footprint

    Driving culture impacts Minnesota’s carbon footprint

    If a cancer cell knew it was a cancer cell, would it change its behavior? Knowing that it will eventually kill its host, and thus itself, would it arrest its own growth? Would the cancer cell deny itself the satisfaction of its most pressing instinct for its own good? I’ve turned this question over in…

  • Around the world in 108 MHz

    Around the world in 108 MHz

    Despite many proclamations of its impending demise, radio lives on. In part, the medium survives because it has integrated with the internet. When I broadcast my Great Northern Radio Show last month, I heard from listeners in Alaska, Italy, Spain and beyond. And yet I still think of the casual listener driving across Northern Minnesota,…

  • Therapist with Hibbing roots highlighted for suicide prevention efforts

    Therapist with Hibbing roots highlighted for suicide prevention efforts

    For the fourth straight year, human life expectancy in the United States declined. This has relatively little to do with longevity. After all, more people are living longer. But rather it has everything to do with how many people we lose to depression and addiction each year. The Huffington Post published a long form essay…

  • Event seeks Range voices on sustainable future

    Event seeks Range voices on sustainable future

    There aren’t many blogs about the Iron Range. You’re reading one of them. That means that if you google “Mesabi Iron Range” you find me. With this cool but largely unprofitable fact comes great responsibility. For instance, people e-mail me and want to know why the Iron Range is the way it is, how it…

  • The story behind tariffs, steel and the Iron Range

    The story behind tariffs, steel and the Iron Range

    Eight months ago, President Trump’s administration slapped significant tariffs on several classes of foreign products, including steel. These tariffs have been at the center of speculation over America’s economy, global trade and politics ever since. The conventional wisdom here on Northern Minnesota’s Iron Range is that the tariffs have been good for us. Sure, they…

  • Mining gold near Togo? The rush is … on hold

    Mining gold near Togo? The rush is … on hold

    So I binge watched “Deadwood” recently. I know, I know. No one wants to hear what I’m watching on TV. We’re all busy watching one of 9,000 shows on 50 different platforms, having independent experiences that confine us all to our own small community of strangers. Or we’re not watching TV at all because we’re…

  • What next for Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation?

    What next for Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation?

    Minnesota Gov.-elect Tim Walz launched his official administrative transition team this week. Walz and retiring Gov. Mark Dayton both hail from the Democratic Farmer Labor Party, so we can expect some continuity in policy and certain key staff positions. Nevertheless, many new people will hold high level state posts when Walz takes office in 2019.…

  • Iron Range districts eye shared school, new model

    Iron Range districts eye shared school, new model

    Student desks form even rows on hardwood floors. A chalkboard at the front of the room frames the teacher’s heavy, spacious desk. Heavy vinyl maps roll down from the ceiling. Most of us recognize this picture as school. In fact, this scene so imprints our minds that decades later we still dream about it. It’s…

  • Jim and Silent Bob pitch whiskey on Tonight Show

    Jim and Silent Bob pitch whiskey on Tonight Show

    Bob Dylan’s hometown of Hibbing, Minnesota, marks the changes in his sprawling career with bemused resignation. Nevertheless, some folks still wonder what the boy they knew as Robert Zimmerman is up to. Earlier this year Dylan announced his new whiskey label, dubbed Heaven’s Door. And while his “never-ending” concern tour keeps rolling, Dylan has adopted the…

  • Domino’s picks Duluth for pothole marketing scheme

    Domino’s picks Duluth for pothole marketing scheme

    Tonight, the Duluth City Council is poised to accept $5,000 from Domino’s Pizza to repair some of the city’s legendary potholes. You might have seen Domino’s “Paving for Pizza” nationwide television ad campaign that ran over the last several months. The premise is that potholes cause pizzas in the backseat of cars to go flying…